Contractures due to Brain Damage
Thanks for your reply Nancy! Sounds like you have been through alot.
I use aromatherapy also with the patients, in addition, music also. I always talk to my comatose patients, something I try to minimize with a client who is not sick.
I have experienced a four year period during my life where I was very sick. I had several strokes several years ago, which left me with ephasia ? (not a good speller LOL). It was very difficult to communicate. My daughter was the only one that could tell the staff at the hospital what I wanted. How she knew, I don't know. I guess she just knows how I think. Fortunately, I recovered completely.
I have also been hospitalized and had tremendous pain and people would talk around me like I wasn't there, or they thought I couldn't hear, but I could. You just don't know what someone is experiencing when they are in a situation where they are unable to communicate. Because of this, I think it has made me more sensitive to patients who are severely ill. I like working in a hospital-nursing home setting. Touch is so reassuring and relaxing. I can remember when someone just held my hand, how important that was to me when I was sick, even though I wasn't able to tell them.
I feel that people who are in a coma or just waking up from a coma, still have a spirit, and I just pray that I am communicating to that sprit, and that somehow, some of my intentions are getting through.
I can tell that the massage relaxes my patients. I would love to have more success in getting the contractures to release, but with this one patient, her contractures always return, and she is very stiff. I know she is benifiting from the touch, but I sure would like to be able to help those contractures also.
I recently got a new patient. I used to work on his roomate. Most of my hospital patients are like "Terry Schiavo?". Even though he is considered to be in a coma, because he cannot respond to commands, he has periods where he is awake. His mother has stopped his treatments and says she is saving money for his funeral. He has been on life support for six years. Was injured in a car accident and has permanent brain damage. I feel so sorry for him. He hears my voice when I am working on his roomate. He cuts his eyes toward me when I come into the room, before I close the curtain. His mother just leaves him to the nurses and rarely visits. It really makes me sad to not have an order to work on him any longer. I think he did respond to the touch and was at least on some level reassured. I feel like he must wonder why I am not working on him, but you do what you can do. I try to bring comfort to as many of these patients as I can. Of course, all of them require a doctor's order or permission, so I can only work on the one's I have orders for. Working on these types of clients is a wide open area. In a town of about half-a million people and many massage therapists, I am only aware of one other massage therapist that is doing this. I am glad to be one of them. Maybe when I get old someone will massage me huh?
I have tried numerous products for pain relief on both myself and my clients. I really like the Biotone, Polar Lotion and Nature Sunshine's Tei Fu Massage Lotion. It is easy to work with and the ingredients are good. I tried Biofreeze, but I really didn't like it as well, and you don't get the pain relief that you get with the Polar Lotion or Tei Fu Lotion.
Anyway, thanks again for you reply.
Ann (harmony401)