Chronic Illness and the Holidays- Experts describe strategies to let people with chronic illness enjoy the holidays.

from the WebMD Feature Archive
Rosalind Joffe, MEd, once hosted a Thanksgiving dinner for 22 people at her house. She planned it months in advance. She hired someone to clean. She created a menu and delegated various dishes to guests. A friend came over the day before the holiday to set the table. Relatives were assigned jobs to serve dinner and clean up afterwards. Joffe has the planning sense of Martha Stewart. She also has multiple sclerosis (MS) and ulcerative colitis.
While it was challenging to host Thanksgiving, she says she’d have felt worse if she hadn’t. “The key was advance planning,” she tells WebMD. “What I’ve learned is if I ask for help in advance, even with my own family, people don’t feel put upon. They feel they’re a part of the event.”
Joffe is among the many people living with chronic illness — defined as lasting more than three months, being persistent or recurrent, having a significant health impact, and typically being incurable. So, with Christmas and Hanukkah at hand, times when everyone is supposed to participate and feel cheerful, what are some strategies for coping?
Read the article at WebMD - click here
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November 26, 2009
Tags: holidays and chronic illness Posted in: COPD and the Holidays

One Response
Lacey Cook - June 17, 2010
my mom suffered colitis last year and it was quite an expensive disease.’,*
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