As some one already said...literally every toy goes in the mouth at young ages. |
You’re going to laugh at this post when you have baby #2 and your toddler wipes his fingers across his snotty nose and then puts his fingers directly into his little sister’s mouth. |
This. And like another PP said, the illness will easy off a bit in about a month or 2, and then your baby will start crawling. They will be licking EVERYTHING and getting sick non-stop. It really just is how it is. A few things that will help in a minor way: -bathe nightly, even if it's just a water rinse off. If you can't do this, do a good wipe down of hands, face, head and neck. -get yourself some zinc. My kids are 3 and 5 and haven't had a sick day in over 9 months. I don't even know what to do with all my extra PTO! I am not even kidding. |
Not every daycare kid gets sick all the time.
DD is 3 and has been in daycare since she was 10 months old. She had 2 ear infections the first year, but that was it (aside from a day here and there when she had a low-grade fever). Since then I can count on one hand the number of sick days she's had. |
Yep, I had something like 200 extra hours of sick time banked by my first child's second birthday because...he just wasn't sick that much. Never had an ear infection, never had croup, etc. |
Not just toys--everything. And your kid will touch any surface and then touch the face or mouth. |
Separate toys are a non-starter, but there are some incrementally helpful things that your daycare can do (and may already be doing):
Frequent and regular handwashing of kids Require parents to wash kids hands upon dropoff Send email to parents whenever a case of certain illnesses is confirmed in the class. At our daycare this includes flu, HFM, and croup. I don't remember what else. |
This is required if they are licensed--there is a list of diseases they must notify about. |
Just deal with it and assume these minor things are good for your child's immune system. In many ways its worse to deal with the constant sickness at 3/4/5 when they are in pre-school for the first time. |
+1 My kids both went to daycare. It's part of the deal. FWIW they're now in elementary and NEVER get sick. The oldest is in 3rd grade and has never missed a day of school. |
It is what it is. Get a nanny or do a home daycare if you can't afford a nanny. They'll nap better as well.
I had both my kids at home until they were about older 3ish and they started preschool and I can also say I don't really think the whole idea that they either get sick constantly as babies or as older kids is really true. I think as babies, they are uniquely shoving everything in their mouths. Yes, they will get sick when they're older, but neither of mine had a constant stream of illnesses when they started group care for the first year or anything. |
Same. |
Girrrrl, when my baby started daycare, we were both sick for 4 months straight with one thing or another. Now she's one hardy ass little kid loving life. You will all be fine. |
Our daycare was really good about taking toys that kids set down and setting them aside to be washed. In our first year of daycare, both of my kids caught only one minor thing each (one the sniffles and the other hand foot and mouth). We took metro to daycare, too. Now they're in elementary school and sick all the time, though... |
Agree that daycare isn’t for all families. My firstborn literally never got sick. My secondborn has gotten sick twice (is 18 months). So for us daycare has been fine. Sounds like it isn’t working for you. |