| Never! I would never leave my child at hospital alone. Never. Someone we know we'll would be with him at all times around the clock. He's now 10. |
no one asked what you'd do as an adult. The question is about children. |
Be proud of it!! That was an absolutely grueling schedule that you put together for your baby's benefit. You should be proud of yourself. |
I agree. I'm a PP whose kid has been hospitalized about 10 times. The longest was for 11 days only. And I only have the one child. In your shoes, I would have tried to do the same thing. And honestly, you are super-woman. Not only were you looking out for 3 kids, one of whom was in the hospital, but you were recovering from giving birth. |
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Me, personally? My oldest was in the hospital for 2 months when he was born. I spent all day there but there was no where to sleep (was at Inova Fairfax before they did the big addition/reno to the NICU), so open room with about 12-14 babies per room. When he spent a few days there at age 2, I never left. Much more aware and he had his own room with a bed where I could sleep and a shower.
But the NICU experience was upsetting. Lots of parents doing the best they could. Some of the babies were in there very long term (one had been in for more than 6 months). Parents had to work and pay the bills and some lived far away. It is a tough situation and one that I hope I never find myself in again. Even with my money and time resources, it was awful. |
| I don't leave any relative or friend in the hospital for extended periods. I've saved a couple friends from serious errors and my own life was saved because my husband was at my side (pulmonary embolism). |
I have seen that too. Went to visit a friend's daughter who was hospitalized. Friend stayed with her DD for months in the hospital. But in other rooms babies and little kids were just alone and it was just too sad. No parents, no relatives, nothing. Just a small body in bed all hooked up. |
Of course it is sad. But it is what it is. Most people are doing the best they they can. It would be a very rare who parent who would prefer to leave the child alone. |
+ 1. I am sympathetic to those who have no option but to leave their loved ones in the hospitals for whatever reasons. The truth is that even in the best of hospitals quality of care and attention significantly diminishes when there are no relatives to keep an eye on things. |
I spent a month in the hospital a few years ago and I would hate this set-up. I liked having a visitor or two a day and for my husband to visit after work and eat dinner together, but no way would I want someone with me all of the time. |
That may be true of hospitals in general. It is not true of the NICU. There are very low nurse ratios and excellent, caring care. The babies sleep a lot, and when they are awake, the nurses hold them if that's what they want. |
I think you mean high nurse ratios. |
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My son was in the NICU for four days after birth. I don't understand the people here saying they were with a NICU baby 24/7. The NICU had visiting hours and you were not allowed to sit in there 24/7--even if allowed, I don't see how it would be possible as you can't eat, pee, or sleep in the NICU.
At any rate, there were 5 other babies in the NICU with my son, and we only saw other parents in there a couple of times--which made sense as once the mother is discharged, there is no place at the hospital for the parents (other than to sit in the waiting room). So, of course, people were going home and coming back for visiting hours. And as for care, the NICU always had more staff than babies from what we saw, and at any given time the babies were mostly sleeping. |
Maybe you walked by while the parent left the room to pee. Or maybe the child's parents were killed in a car accident. Or maybe you walked by while the parent went to get the kid ice cream. Seriously you have no idea what another person's situation is. Mind your own business. |
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I think everyone needs an advocate when they are in the hospital, at all times if possible. When that midnight nurse comes in to administer a med, who is watching? Making sure it's correct? Making sure if your child has to pee that someone answers the bell?
I agree it's not always possible to be there all the time but even with a teen, I'd strive to be there as much as possible. I don't trust hospitals, doctors. Heck I don't trust most people. |