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SARA MITCHELL

CO-FOUNDER

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Our daughter Sadie was diagnosed with a perinatal stroke in utero shortly after her birth. Her first symptom was seizure activity and we were fortunate to have a medical team that immediately assessed for stroke. We had access to incredible care through our county infant-toddler and parents as teacher programs and we also utilized private therapy. Sadie is now a first grader and loves music, art and playing outside.

I have always felt fortunate that having a background and network in healthcare gave me a foundation to know what advocacy looked like and that the best care for Sadie would likely be multi-pronged with a variety of specialists. My concern beyond Sadie has been empathy for how challenging this diagnosis would be for a family that didn’t understand healthcare processes or that may not have our support system.

What’s one piece of advice you would give a family whose child has recently been diagnosed?
Use your resources and let people help you. We were blessed by so many people who reached out early on, but I still went back to work too soon and was often hesitant to be vulnerable enough to ask for help. I also wish I would have utilized therapy sooner. Any adverse medical situation can be overwhelming, but early and consistent access to mental healthcare is an important topic for discussion that often gets overlooked due to stigma. In my opinion, it also has the greatest potential to improve function at a family level by improving resiliency, reducing stress and positively impacting the child’s environment which leads to optimal outcome.

What should I do first?
Stop and take a breath. Take care of yourself, know you aren’t alone and begin assembling your care team with a single landing spot for information. We like notebooks! (Order or download one here.)

What not to do: (Early on.) Google. Much of the information available regarding diagnosis will not be readily absorbed or processed if your stress level is high. You are likely better off communicating with their direct care team when possible if you have questions regarding your child’s condition.

What to do next: Focus on what you can control, ask questions, know you aren’t alone, take it one day at at time, and love on your kiddo.

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