So Many Possibilities
Aug. 27th, 2009 10:10 pmDid we catch this bug from the other kids at the library's story hour? At the fabulous Please Touch Museum, where we touched things? From the several thousand riders and supporters at the Livestrong Challenge finish line? At the gymnastics academy that had an open house for its preschoolers' program, where we found the only ball pit I've seen anywhere since the H1N1 outbreak started? From the playdate where the other kids' mom said they were over the roseola and couldn't possibly still be contagious?
Some quarantine decisions are easy: we won't be keeping our weekend plans with anybody who's starting chemotherapy on Monday. Other decisions are not so easy. If we caught the bug at the library, we don't need to stay home from story hour tomorrow. If from our playdate, then we know at least one family we can play with this week. Heck, if we knew the bug to be roseola, we could shrug, mumble something about it being common and mostly harmless, and pretend there was nothing to see here. But the Please Touch Museum is in another city two hours away, and half the riders at the finish line were from the DC area, and this might not be roseola, so maybe we're New Jersey's patients 0, 1, and 2.
If Gareth were in daycare, we'd be facing this quandary at least once a month. Great googly-moogly, how do parents with kids in daycare survive?
(Oh, and it looks like I've overcome my swearing habit. Heck? Great googly-moogly? Those really were the first words that popped into my head for those sentences. Another year of childrearing, and people will hardly be able to tell I live in Jersey.)
EDIT:
Dan's well enough to cook...sort of.
Some quarantine decisions are easy: we won't be keeping our weekend plans with anybody who's starting chemotherapy on Monday. Other decisions are not so easy. If we caught the bug at the library, we don't need to stay home from story hour tomorrow. If from our playdate, then we know at least one family we can play with this week. Heck, if we knew the bug to be roseola, we could shrug, mumble something about it being common and mostly harmless, and pretend there was nothing to see here. But the Please Touch Museum is in another city two hours away, and half the riders at the finish line were from the DC area, and this might not be roseola, so maybe we're New Jersey's patients 0, 1, and 2.
If Gareth were in daycare, we'd be facing this quandary at least once a month. Great googly-moogly, how do parents with kids in daycare survive?
(Oh, and it looks like I've overcome my swearing habit. Heck? Great googly-moogly? Those really were the first words that popped into my head for those sentences. Another year of childrearing, and people will hardly be able to tell I live in Jersey.)
EDIT:
Dan's well enough to cook...sort of.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 02:54 am (UTC)It's not all kids that get sick all the time in daycare.
Some do fine.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 03:05 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 03:17 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 03:31 am (UTC)He's doing better since we started giving him tylenol and ibuprofen infants' drops, but whenever the last dose is down within its final half hour, he starts showing signs of major discomfort again. That's pretty much what we're experiencing with our grown-up versions of the same OTC meds. I'm lowballing my own doses, since the little guy is not quite weaned yet.
With tylenol and ibuprofen, we can sort of approximate normalcy, which makes it really tempting to get out of the house. The possibility of getting sicker and having to stay home is making me preemptively restless.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 09:00 pm (UTC)THe Giant Book of pediatric nursing says about roseola:
usually from 6 months to 3 years. Incubation 5--15 days. Persistent high fever greater than 102F for 3 to 4 days in a child who appears well. Precipitous drop in fever to normal with appearance of rash. Photo shows a diffuse spread of discrete dots all over the trunk. First on trunk, then to neck, face, extremities, fades on pressure, lasts 1 to 2 days. Swollen glands, cough and runny nose. Non-specific care, Administer antipyretics as needed.
In other words, what you said.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 04:51 am (UTC)So far A. only brought one cold home from preschool but it isn't cold season yet. You can call or email me for a play date when you are all a bit better.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-30 02:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 07:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-30 02:06 am (UTC)Our new pedagogical challenge: teaching Gareth to cough into his elbow, rather than right on people. He's figuring out please and thank you, and is starting to understand sorry, but each of those took months of modeling, explanation, and prompting, and they're still works in progress. I suspect he'll be coughing right in people's faces for at least another year before he adopts the elbow habit.
Thank goodness he enjoys hand washing.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 04:24 pm (UTC)I also know some people who obsess about where their kids got the germs that made them sick, as if by knowing that, they can inflict some sort of justice upon the offenders. I don't worry about where we got it, and I don't really worry about where it goes.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-30 02:01 am (UTC)I only worry about where it came from because I can't help worrying about where it goes. When
no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 04:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-30 01:51 am (UTC)Ah, but there is logic to that one (though I agree that sometimes there just isn't). You have to keep taking care of the kids when you have a little touch of something, while the kids' responsibilities are mostly things they can take a break from when they get sick.
Feel better, all of y'all!
no subject
Date: 2009-08-30 01:40 am (UTC)If it is Nick we got it from, that means you and I can get together to write without worrying that I'll give you some awful germ that will make life with asthma even harder during the first week of the school year. Let's see if we can match symptoms over the phone tomorrow, and if it still seems like the same malady, we can make some coffee dates.
The only reason I worry about where I got it from is because I don't want to expose people who haven't been exposed yet, especially people who have some extra risk factor that makes easy germs hard. Please don't stress on my account over something you couldn't have known was coming. Kids get sick, kids spread contagion, that's life with kids.