hi bostonian,
you asked the question how can you prepare yourself for her first transfusion, well unfortunately i don't think you can. i mean, how does a parent prepare themselves to see their small baby being poked and strapped down. for me that was such a long time ago, but yet i remember it as it were yesterday, i was just 21 when my son started with his transfusions. he would cry so much, i felt so helpless, i would have to leave the room, i just couldn't take, many times he would end up with 3, 4 different pokes due to not being able to get an IV started. as he got older, it got even worse, the hospital that we went to had a big sign of a jiraffe about 1/2 a block before the hospital, as soon as my son would see that jiraffe he would just started screaming and crying, those were difficult times for me, especially going thru it by myself.
that was almost 18yrs ago, i can't explain how to get thru it, it's just something that you do. you do a lot of crying a lot of why me, why him and at the end of the day the answer is always the same, why not him. you will soon come to see that you are stronger than you think you could ever be. you just do what needs to be done. people use to ask me when he was little didnt it bother me to poke him to do his desferal, of course it bothered me, it broke my heart every time knowing that i was causing him pain, but i did it anyways, i had to, it was for his survival.
thalassemia was very different in 1988 vs today, there are many advances today, just the exjade alone is a miracle, we've been waiting for this pill for 17yrs. that in itself will help make life so much easier for you and your daughter. it took the doctors 3mos to figure out what was wrong with my son, we saw endless specialists, no one could figure out what was wrong, no one bothered to look into my and his father's nationality so thal was never mentioned, i had never even heard of this disease. it wasn't untill he was hospitalised with a hg of 4 that they thought hey lets look into the parents background, and come to find out we are both carriers.
don't despair, life is much more promising for those born today with thal, with the apropriate care of a good hematologist, your daughter can have an almost perfect life. my son is almost 18 he has many problems but yet none of which have slowed him down, people would never guess he is sick unless we tell them, he looks just like any other kid, he's a little smaller in size but that's it.
i hope this helps, take care,
lily