ALISA: There is a photo to go with this called fleitas that was e-mailed on 10/1
ALISA: There is a photo to go with this called fleitas that was e-mailed on 10/1
Also we may download the web-site itself to further illustrate the story.
HEALTH MONITOR
A WEB SITE BY, FOR AND ABOUT CHILDREN WITH ILLNESS
FAIRFIELD â A lot of wisdom has gone into the 250-page Web site called âBandaides & Blackboards â When Chronic Illness... or Some Other Medical Problem... Goes to School.â And most of that wisdom comes from children.
Gently guided by Dr Joan Fleitas, an assistant professor of nursing at Fairfield University, the children teach others about living in bodies that donât always behave, and how it feels to be growing up in a world too frequently insensitive to their needs. Arranged on brightly colored and inviting pages, visitors to the Web site can choose to click into a frog pond or click on a hopping frog to find information for kids, teens or adults.
As the Web site has grown and become recognized for its quality, over 800 individuals and organizations, the major search engines, and several teaching hospitals have created electronic links to it from their own Web pages.
Dr Fleitas added a âSite for Siblings,â who often feel alone with their frustrations and fears, as well as a list of books they might find helpful. While initially conceived for elementary and middle school children, she began to receive narratives from adolescents as well, and so added a âTeen Site.â
âI wanted to give these children a voice and a way to break through the isolation so many of them feel,â said Dr Fleitas, who teaches pediatric nursing and supervises university students in their clinical rotations at Yale-New Haven Hospital. âThat sense of isolation can get compounded when families try to keep the childâs illness a secret.
âSecrecy is so sad. It suggests to children that something about them is awful; it reduces the amount of social support and services available to them, and it consumes an enormous amount of energy on everyoneâs part.â
Dr Fleitas began compiling narratives from children during her doctoral work at Columbia Teachersâ College.
âThe thing these kids want most is to be normal,â she explained. âInitially I was afraid they might not want to be associated with a Web site concerned with things they wish they did not have.â That concern was soon quelled when she started receiving stories both online and by mail that children, some with the help of their parents, wrote about what itâs like to have leukemia, chemotherapy, cardiac disease, muscular dystrophy, lupus, arthritis, Crohnâs disease, an amputation, cerebral palsy, Rettâs Syndrome, and so on.
Perhaps what made Dr Fleitas so attuned to the struggles of children with illness was her own experience with her daughter Amanda, who has Down Syndrome and alopecia (baldness).
âThe stigma that accompanies such conditions becomes an illness on top of illness, and a double burden for these kids,â she said.
Her work in establishing âBandaides and Blackboardsâ has been an effort to sensitize people to what itâs like to grow up with differences. One student with cystic fibrosis, for example, wrote of her gratitude when her teacher allowed all the kids in class to have water bottles on their desks. âIt made me not feel weird,â she said, referring to her need to have water on hand.
Another youngster was delighted when each student in class had a different day to tell âWhatâs Special About Me.â Not only did it give her a forum to talk about what it was like to have had 22 operations, but it made her the âgo toâ person for any child in school going into the hospital.
Dr Fleitas said, âI have been the student and children have been my teachers.â The most important thing she says she has learned is that âthey are first of all children, with the same needs, joys, hurts and misconceptions that all children share.
âTheir chronic illnesses or other medical conditions are part of them, but do not define them. I hope they will learn as they grow that they can be proud of who they are and that whatâs going on with their health is part of that pride, not something to be ashamed of.â
The Web address for Bandaides and Blackboards is http://funrsc.fairfield.edu/~jfleitas/contents.html (the symbol before âjfleitasâ is the upper left key on your computer, using the Shift key).