Select Page

Childhood Illness : the family impact

Dana Sobanpanah

For this family, the diagnosis of their son’s brain tumour was a tumultuous event that changed their lives forever. A decade later, the family is still dealing with the ‘late effects’ of the treatment. Even though they have adjusted to the changes, the diagnosis has changed their lives and the impact can never be reversed. It was a humbling experience listening to their journey. I hope I have expressed the devastation of the diagnosis caused to the family through my artwork of a mother and child. The shattered image represents the devastation the diagnosis caused for the child as well as the impact it had on everyone around him. I have attempted to show the complexities involved in providing whole-person care when the mind, body and soul of the patient are all affected. I have used the image of a screaming child to express the difficulties faced when dealing with children, who may be unwilling or unable to express their own feeling, emotions and concerns. I hope the image serves as a reminder that sometimes it is impossible for medicine to reverse the impacts of disease, sometimes all we can do is support people and families so they can eventually find a way to accept and adapt to the challenges they face.
Producing this artwork reminded me that medicine is more than the biochemical and physical levels of the disease.
Talking to the family, I understood that for many, medicine is a process of healing and not necessarily about finding a cure.
Whole Person Care, Year One, 2016