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#11
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Quote:
then, once the new immune system is settled into the new host, all of the normal vaccinations one gets over the course of their life need to be re-administered, as the new host will not have immunity to standard diseases. they tell you when you are a caregiver for someone like this, as well as the patient themselves - you take it one day at a time. you don't completely immerse yourself in cancer literature constantly, you will go insane if you do that. you learn what you need to do get the work done. it will take 6-8 hours per day, seven days per week, at the hospital, once she has the transplant in and is settling in. possibly up to thirty blood transfusions, as well as platelets. it's a full time job to take care of someone in her condition. most days she's perfectly amulatory, we take walks and do light workouts sometimes, depending on her energy level. i am instructed by the doctors to disallow her from doing things like dishes, or cleaning the house, or the cat litter boxes, due to the possible exposure to micro-organisms and viruses and such. this is why i do not work, or haven't since july. that and i do not need the money, as i am financially secure through a variety of means. and i have an extended network that has offered assistance, something that most people simply don't have the option for in this country. so i count my blessings. i'm sorry that your arrogance or abuse or whatever has made you so cruel and deranged, but believe it or not, i am going to listen to the team of people with PhD's in this exact type of cancer and not your "scrawled on the wall on an insane asylum" shit in this thread. | |||
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