Tag Archives: broken bone

Helping Someone Live With an Injury

 

Elliwheelchair

A supportive group of family and friends made all the difference with Elli while she healed.

Throughout our lives many of us may have lived with a sprain or some minor aches and pains. But, having surgery and/or breaking a bone and navigating life with a cast, boot, crutches, etc. is very different.  After my daughter’s 12 breaks, and the tens of thousands of customers we have served, I think it’s safe to say I’m an expert at how to care for an injured person and helping someone live with an injury. Following are my 7 best tips to help you help someone living with an injury. (BTW, regardless of the suggestions, always use common sense and follow your doctor’s advice!)

    • Make Life Accessible
      Ahhh, accessibility! It’s something we take for granted. Here’s an exercise to help you understand your loved one’s need for accessibility. Put on a similar device to what your loved one is wearing (sling/boot). Now, pretend your arm is broken or you’re on a scooter or crutches. The next thing you need to do is pretend you need to go to the bathroom. Can you get there? Is it up or down a set of stairs? How about doors or clutter impeding your path? Can you see it? Is the toilet paper out of reach for a rotator cuff injury? Try the same exercise for dressing, then fixing a simple sandwich or a bowl of soup (practically impossible when on crutches or in a sling; stay with the sandwich). Are things accessible in the kitchen? Check out our post on “Cooking While Wearing a Boot, Cast, Sling, or Being on Crutches” for helpful cooking ideas.If you have an arm in a sling or cast or have to use crutches, try to carry the items you’re loved one wants/needs from one room to the next. How can it be done? One of our customers, Paul, kept duplicate magazines, pillows, blankets, home phone, fresh water bottles, and the remote control all within easy reach for his wife who was on crutches due to a bunionectomy. He also made sure the path was clear for her when she was on the move. The more accessible things are the less likely additional injury, or strain on the current injury, is to occur.

 

    • Stay On Top of Pain Medications
      The first few days after an injury and/or surgery is not the time for your loved ones to be stoic. If they were prescribed pain medicine, please give it to them at the allotted time according to the doctor’s prescription. Research has proven that staying on top of pain medication actually speeds up the healing process. Missed a dose? Contrary to popular belief, doubling up on pain meds does not help in healing. In fact, I could be detrimental. Please, check with your physician. Well-meaning friends and family may suggest herbs and/or natural remedies, but beware. Some could have serious contraindications if mixed with certain medications. Always check with your doctor, first, when altering, modifying, changing, adding to, or missing your medications. For more information on pain management and medication options, here’s a helpful article from the Mayo Clinic.

 

    • Encourage Rest
      The best thing you can do for your loved one is to help them rest. Quiet the phones, limit the number of visits, and the length of the visit, and limit exposure to electronics. Nothing is better for healing from an injury than good, old-fashioned sleep. Your loved one may try to do everything they used to – even at the same pace. The reality is that in order to heal better, and faster, they need rest. They need to rest the injured body part and they need physical rest. It may seem a bit dramatic, but sitting or lying down before feeling pain and/or fatigue is a sure way to heal faster. This is especially true if they are tired from not resting at night due to pain or poor sleep.

 

    • Move Clutter
      Remove any unnecessary clutter out of an injured person’s path. If you have rugs, temporarily remove them to avoid any trips or falls. Pick up all toys, shoes, magazine piles, and other items that are in the pathway where your loved one will walk. Remember, they are compromised and may not be able to see as obstacles or maneuver around them.

 

    • Avoid Boredom
      OK, your loved one has an injury….does that mean that they have to stop enjoying life? No! They can still get out and do things, within the limitations of their injury. Include them in activities, even if they need to stay immobile. Play games with them, talk with them, or just hang out with them. Help them to not get bored, but don’t go overboard! You don’t want them getting too tired or get tired of you! Need more ideas on how to keep busy?  Check out our blog on 10 Fun Things to do While in a Cast, Walking Boot, or Crutches. 

 

    • Be Patient with the Patient
      An injured person has had their life turned upside down and are also in pain. You may be surprised to find your mild-mannered child or upbeat adult become suddenly sullen and snappy. They are adjusting to their new reality at the same time you are adjusting to your new role. In most cases, the pain and inconvenience is a temporary one, so please keep it in perspective. Also remember, people act differently when in pain and when on pain medications. You need to turn up your empathy dial and try to imagine how much pain they’re in or the fact that they can’t do something they really want to do. They may communicate in an abrupt manner or their patience is short.It’s up to us to exercise even more patience to help them through their current situation. Basically, give’em a break! Pun intended. Ultimately, we want to make sure we’re doing all we can to help our loved feel as comfortable as possible while injured. Just ask what they need, keep them comfortable, and their environment as quiet as possible. That will go a long way in helping them feel better, so they heal better!

 

  • Get Help and Rest
    This one’s for YOU. For you to be the best caregiver you can be, you need to take care of yourself, too. Eat and sleep as well as you can, say “no” to new requests, find the humor, accept dinners from friends, and receive and give hugs. Lots of them!

~Annette
Feel Better, Heal Better

Cooking While Injured

Cooking While Injured

 

You’re injured, possibly recovering from surgery, and your only job now is to rest and recover.  Your days are filled with elevating your leg, propping up your arm on pillows, staying on top of your pain medications, having friends and family wait on you, etc.  Then life calls you back to reality.  One of the most pressing get-back-to-life activities is to cook for you and/or your family.  But there are challenges to cooking and baking while recovering from an orthopedic event.  I’ve assembled 15 helpful tips about cooking while wearing a boot, cast, sling or being on crutches. Sift through all the tips to help you with your condition. Hint: my most important tip is the last one and applies to everyone.  Read on kitchen warrior… Continue reading

Not every broken bone needs a cast

Submitted by Annette d. Giacomazzi, Owner and Founder of CastCoverz!™, America’s #1 trusted brand of orthopedic covers and accessories.

Annette’s daughter, Elli, was the inspiration for CastCoverz! when she suffered her 6th broken bone, at the age of 10.  Read more about that story here.  

My 17 year old daughter and I were in a serious car accident two months ago. Elli suffered the greatest with a broken femur and collarbone.  We were hit by an unlicensed driver who ran a red light, then struck a vehicle which launched him airborne, until he slammed into my daughter who was sitting in the front passenger seat of my car. You can’t see it in the picture, but the truck’s wheel imprint was just 1 foot behind where my daughter sat.  3 cars were totalled and the jaws of life had to be used to extricate her fromIMG952240 the car.  It was the most helpless feeling a mother could ever have.   And nothing ever prepares you to witness your child throwing up in a cervical collar.  The next day, a rod was literally hammered up into her femur and screws installed into her hip and knee. Instead of having a 5 inch scar across her shoulder, she chose to have her collarbone heal on its own.

At a time when most 17 year olds are looking at Forever 21 or Hollister brands, Elli’s accessories were a hospital bed and wheelchair.  The doctor had an in-your-face description of her condition, “while she heals, she doesn’t have the use of 50% of her body.” She couldn’t roll over in bed, brush her hair, or brush her teeth. I will honor my daughter by not describing more of what she couldn’t do or what she needed help with. Imagine being a 17 year old girl wanting to assert your independence during your much anticipated senior summer, now once again totally dependent on your mother. My heart ached for her. She needed 3 people to get her out of bed and into the wheelchair, an excruciating, exhausting event for her. I had to give her shots in her skinny belly so she wouldn’t die of blood clots due to laying flat. No matter how much she needed me, I thanked God every time she called for me, whether it was 5 times in 20 minutes or the middle of the night due to hallucinations from the pain medications.  That’s because the alternative, loss of limb, paralysis, or death, could have been our reality.

There wasn’t a dry eye as she was wheeled across her high school auditorium by friends to receive her graduation diploma. Even though my daughter lost her senior summer, blessedly, she will mostly recover from her physical injuries.  Two and a half months later, she uses her wheelchair for long excursions (farmer’s market, shopping, etc…) and crutches for shorter stints (around the house, to the movies). She’s finally back in her own bed and bedroom surrounded by her familiar pictures, soft pillows and fuzzy blankets. She’s even starting to go out with friends. Sidebar: Elli has amazing, rise-to-the-occasion friends. Their visits were just as important as the any medicine or therapy and I welcomed each and every one of them.  They made her laugh until she was exhausted.  Check out this blog post and pic of Elli with her big-hearted  friends. Even her boyfriend, Chad, completely stepped up to the plate during this mind-blowing experience demonstrating tremendous allegiance and patience, at such a young age.  

This horrific nightmare didn’t stop my Elli.  Still in a wheelchair or crutches, she is volunteering next week, her 6th year, for Vacation 2015-07-08-16-25-22Bible School at our church, and she’s worked a few hours at CastCoverz! for spending money (thankfully, there is only so much of the Kardashians you can watch). After securing a handicapped dorm room, in 3 short weeks from now, we drop her off at Auburn University in Alabama, 2,300 miles from home, to begin her college career. Amazingly, she’s excited about it.  Bless her heart. Bless her great big “I’m-not-letting-anything-stop-me-from-living-a-great-life” heart.

In no way do I minimize her condition, but it is a miracle that Elli “only” broke bones. Her femur and collar bone are broken bones number 11 and 12 and neither require a cast, so no covers from CastCoverz! to make her “Feel Better, so she could Heal Better.” But, she could hand-pick as many designer Slingz! she wanted, and chose a rainbow of designer color crutches and crutch covers.  In addition, our awesome team of sewists, tailored her clothes to accommodate a broken collar bone and femur.   Best of all, the CastCoverz! team kept the business humming along while I stayed home to care for Elli and to recoup from my two surgeries. 

God, side airbags and my big ole’ burb saved my daughter’s life.  Angels came dressed as friends who made her laugh and helped her with year-end school projects.  More angels delivered home-cooked delicious meals and were also disguised as employees who went out of their way so a mother could care for her badly broken daughter. We are blessed.  So very, very blessed.   

 

 

Fun and Functional Gift Ideas for Mother’s Day

Mother’s Day is coming and mom is recovering from an orthopedic event…wondering what to buy her? You can help mom feel better, so she heals better with CastCoverz!  The oh-so-common Mother’s Day gifts are chocolates and flowers.  Think outside the (chocolate) box this year and give mom a fun AND functional gift she’ll appreciate during this inconvenient and uncomfortable time in her life.

New FB Cover Photo from Exhibit

CastCoverz! provides much needed comfort and function, in addition to adding some style.  Whether mom is wearing an arm or leg cast, gimping around on crutches, using a cane, wearing a walking boot, or has her arm in a sling, CastCoverz! has just the perfect Mother’s Day gift!

Kristine Joan Seeing Spots Pink and PurpleProducts range from cast covers (to keep her cast covered, clean, &ccz010215_006 snag-free), designer color crutches and canes (in fun colors with quality construction), padded crutch covers (there’s even a handy crutch bag), to walking boot covers (covering those toes and that ugly boot), the Evenup Shoe Balancer (evens gait while wearing a boot), and fashionable arm slings (designed with function in mind by adding a thumb loop for wrist support & comfy faux-fur strap).

With many designer colors and fabrics available, you can choose one or two that are just perfect for her.  Whether it’s bold and beautiful or simple and neutral, CastCoverz! has mom covered this Mother’s Day with fashionable and functional orthopedic accessories.

Happy Mother’s Day!

*CastCoverz! offers same day shipping (when placed before 2:30 pm PST) with delivery in 2-3 business days with U.S Priority Mail (Fedex overnight shipping is also available).