“It was a pretty devastating moment.”
During a scan 20 weeks into her pregnancy, parents Amanda and Dan were given news that left them frightened and overwhelmed. Their first child – a little girl to be named Lydia – was missing the radial bone in her left arm, and the development of the bones in her appending hand were an uncertainty.
“I wish more doctors knew to tell people to go [to Shriners Children’s] when they are given news like this,” Amanda said. “You feel so alone, and it seems no one can tell you what’s going on. But we were lucky that we had already heard about Shriners Children’s from a friend.”
Still unaware that Shriners Children's Greenville had a program specifically designed for parents like them, Amanda called. She hoped to speak with a specialist about Lydia’s condition before they arrived.
“We were scheduled for an outpatient clinic appointment with one of the surgeons,” she said. Amanda, who was still processing the news, was relieved that the Prenatal Orthopedic Educational Session immediately left Dan feeling much better – a feeling she would also gain soon. “There were so many ‘what-ifs’ that we couldn’t know yet, but now we were more informed. We knew we would get the support we needed, and we were grateful that Shriners Children’s was close to home.”