Right, and that is how many families handle night nurses. But OP expects the night nurse to have constant vigilance watching the baby sleep in a dark room. It isn't realistic. What IS realistic for a night nurse is letting them read, watch TV, do laundry, do stuff for the baby, etc. I don't think it is realistic to expect someone to stare at a baby all night and not fall asleep. |
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I knew a woman who worked as a night nurse, she would take on a job for 4-6 weeks and then move onto the next family. She slept during the day while her kids (high schoolers) were at school and was awake while on duty. When the baby slept she did the family laundry, baked muffins, cleaned out the fridge, different things to help mom. She would then bring the baby to mom for nursing or bottle feed herself.
The woman you hired sounds lazy. They charge an awful lot to be sleeping on the job. |
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Yes it seems the 24 hour nurses catch cat naps here and there ( of course) but the 10 or 12 hour ones are supposed to be awake. If not attending to baby, washing bottles, folding laundry.
I think we got a lemon. |
Except OP doesn't want the night nurse to leave the room. She wants her to be watching the baby at all times. So she can't wash bottles or fold laundry or do anything else. Sorry, but put me in a dark room for 8-12 hrs with nothing to do and I'm going to fall asleep too. |
+1 |
This. You have unreasonable expectations OP. either you want her in the dark room with the baby, which she is bound to fall asleep, or you get over this need to have someone staring at the baby at all times, and let her fold laundry and watch TV in another room with a monitor. |
You can't sleep lightly? Its not hard to sit back and rest on and off for 10 minutes here and there without going into a deep sleep. You clearly have never had the pleasure of working night shifts or 12 hour shifts. |
| Before I read this I wondered why in the world anyone would need or want a night nurse. Now that I know they are sleeping on the job I wonder even more. Those first few sleepless months with my baby were so wonderful for bonding. I cant imagine if my memories instead were of pouring money down the drain so a stranger could sleep in my baby's room. |
| I would not be ok with her sleeping, especially not when I pay her $25/hour. However, I would probably not expect her to sit in a dark room with my baby either. |
Because most families have the night nurse do laundry, wash bottles, prepare food, etc while the baby sleeps. However OP wants the night nurse to sit in a dark room and watch the baby sleep all night. I have never heard of anyone hiring a night nurse to do that. I used to work the night shift as an RN and if I had been told to go sit in a dark room during my entire shift and watch someone sleep, I would probably dose off too. It just isn't realistic to expect someone to sit for 8-12 hrs in the dark and watch a baby sleep. |
| doze not dose* |
NP here. Heck, if you turned the lights off in my office right now and told me to stare at a picture of my son all day, I'd definitely fall asleep! |
| I thought a night nurse was just supposed to spare you from waking up for night feedings. She should sleep when the baby is asleep, and wake up to tend to the baby when the baby wakes up, IMO. |
Yes, some night nurses are hired for this purpose, although many will do baby's laundry and wash bottles, etc during this time. |
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The agencies don't let them sleep.
I think you have the wrong night nurse. |