Antonia Verni
Ronald Verni Antonia is on a ventilator. She has a trach. For the last five to six years, she’s had a GT-tube. She also requires a vertical stand to help keep weight on her legs for an hour or so every day. It’s kind of like a medieval contraption actually that straps her in and holds her up vertically. Even though Antonia was paralyzed from the neck down as a baby, she speaks very well and is extremely alert. She also goes to school; she’s in the first grade now. And she loves singing. She also recently started playing a lot of pinball. Nadine, her school nurse, attends school with her Monday through Friday. My wife and I take care of Antonia when we don’t have a nurse. You have to be within 25, 30 feet of Antonia at all times, just in case the line to her vent pops off. You're whole day is basically structured around the time that she needs care, which is 24 hours a day. Fazila Verni Antonia cannot cough, simply coughing or even scratching her head or her nose or her eye, or any physical thing she wants to do is just not possible for her to do alone. You have to help her with any of these basic functions. It’s kind of like you’re living and breathing for that person. You have to do every single thing twice, for you plus the other person. She can’t go to the bathroom so you need to catheterize her. You have to always sunction her. Feed her. Give her a bath. Her muscles often go into spasms. She has a lot of spasms and will arch in response. So, you have to relax her by helping her exercise or by giving her a massage or something like that. You basically do whatever it takes to relax her muscles and help her through. We pay close attention to her vent. The vent is very, very important. You have to know how to operate it, know the alignment, how to change it. And, you need to be very quick because if no one is there to help you, you have to do a few things all by yourself at once and know if there is something wrong with the vent. So, it’s a very, very…important job. Ronald & Fazila |