top of page

Palliative WHO? meet the Sherpas who help us Navigate the Diagnosis of Uncertainty.


Photo credit: SummerStreetPhotograph.org

Here is the 2nd of 4 guest blog posting for Pediatric Home Service designed to educate families like ours about Palliative Care for children.

My son is a one of a kind. He has a unique spirit and constellation of medical complexities. He has a unique God-given purpose in life.

As his Mama, I am saturated by the nuances of his medical care and how these have shifted over time. My knowledge of his history is extensive. I do my best to monitor and assess how the nuances are changing within each day. My vision for his future is usually realistic and always exceptionally hopeful. I am his Mama after all.

In truth, I have no genuine understanding of what lies ahead.

How his neurological condition will change with time, growth, and age?

How his spastic cerebral palsy will progress?

What it is that allows him to defy all medical reason for how he has lived this long, given his fragile respiratory system?

What I do know is that along with my son’s constellation of medical complexities has come the diagnosis of Uncertainty.

Uncertainty’s Sherpas

Uncertainty is a series of steep mountains, treacherous valleys, and occasional quiet waters. Terrain that, before the birth of my son, I didn’t even know existed, let alone how to navigate it.

Merriam Webster defines a Sherpa as someone who is “known for providing support for foreign trekkers and mountain climbers.” (1) They are essential to the ascents of foreigners within various mountains of the Himalayas (2).

In the diagnosis of Uncertainty, I am a foreigner faced with climbing mountains of medical complexities. Our Pediatric Palliative Care Team are our Sherpas.

They have gone before us many times with many children. They know the terrain well and are skilled guides. They can ask meaningful questions to help me find the path that is best for our family. They can synthesize the unique aspects of my son with the known aspects of his various diagnosis.

A Team of Sherpas

Pediatric Palliative Care teams exist within hospital, clinic, and community settings. They are lead by a palliative physician with extensive pediatric experience. Nurses, Social Workers, and Chaplains are key members, all of whom work collaboratively with families. In some contexts teams can extend to include Music Therapists, Volunteers, Massage Therapists, Nurse Practitioners, Pharmacists, Child-Life Specialists, and more. They are an interdisciplinary team of Sherpas who are skilled at helping families articulate their values, make respective medical decisions, ease suffering, and discover in each section of the climb how to “be a family” within this journey.

In the following video, during the first 7:45 minutes, Dr Joanne Wolfe of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute talks about the definition of palliative care, differentiates it from hospice care, and talks about the various members of the palliative care team.

One of the beautiful aspects of pediatric palliative teams is they take on many forms in many contexts. As Jody Charatek, a pediatric palliative nurse with Fairview Home Care says “ When you have seen one pediatric palliative care program… you have seen ONE pediatric palliative care program! -Different programs for different needs” (3)

The Minnesota Network of Hospice and Palliative Care (MNHPC) has developed the first directory of palliative care providers in Minnesota. They have been wise to identify programs that provide some level of pediatric palliative support. This directory is a great way to connect families like ours to the palliative services available within our communities.

As a parent, if you are looking to connect with other families who have been supported by palliative care, I recommend you seek out the Courageous Parents Network. Their website has been designed to be a place where you can find wisdom from fellow parents who understand, as well as resources developed by experts to help you cope and get through each moment.

My son’s team of palliative sherpas have been critical in helping my family navigate the treacherous terrain of Uncertainty. They are the first ones I call when he is showing signs of stress that I am not able to alleviate. When the emotional and spiritual strains of Uncertainty cloud my ability to make difficult medical decisions, they are a trusted compassionate presence, guiding me toward quiet waters. Our palliative sherpas respect the unique characteristics of my son and guide us along a path, encouraging us to savor the unique vistas along the way.

MamaShu & Levi photo credit: Summer Street Photography

  1. M-W.com

  2. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Sherpa-people

  3. Joan “Jody” Chrastek, RN, DNP, CHPN, “Starting (or Jump Starting) A Pediatric Palliative Care Program: Some Tips and One Team’s Experience” Children’s Project on Palliative/ Hospice Services 41 (2015): p14, http://www.nhpco.org/sites/default/files/public/ChiPPS/ChiPPS_ejournal_Issue-41.pdf

Featured Posts
Recent Posts
Search By Tags
No tags yet.
Follow Us
  • Facebook Classic
  • Twitter Classic
  • Google Classic
bottom of page