Your Child in the Hospital
The recovery room
Some hospitals allow parents into the recovery room, others do not. Find out the hospital’s policy and explain this to your child prior to surgery so your child will know what to expect upon awakening. Whether you meet your child in the recovery room or later, comfort him any way you can: hold his hand, rock him, sing songs, play music, watch TV, or read him a book.
Charley was groggy after the surgery and very uncomfortable. I told the nurse, and they gave him some pain medication and then he smiled for the first time. We were in the recovery room for a couple of hours before they moved him upstairs. He didn’t want to listen to music or look at books, so I climbed in the bed and we just cuddled.
If you are going home after the surgery, your child will stay in the recovery room until the staff says she is awake enough to leave (e.g., when she can sip water or eat a Popsicle®). If your child is going to stay in the hospital after surgery, he will be wheeled up to his room after the recovery room staff says it’s safe to go.
Table of Contents
All Guides- Introduction
- 1. Before You Go
- 2. The Emergency Room
- 3. Preparing Your Child
- 4. The Facilities
- 5. The Staff
- 6. Communicating with Doctors
- 7. Common Procedures
- 8. Surgery
- 9. Pain Management
- 10. Family and Friends. What to Say
- 11. Family and Friends. How to Help
- 12. Feelings and Behavior
- 13. Siblings
- 14. Long-Term Illness or Injury
- 15. School
- 16. Medical and Financial Records
- 17. Insurance
- 18. Sources of Financial Help
- 19. Looking Back
- My Hospital Journal
- Packing List
- Resources
- Contributors
- About the Author