Anonymous wrote:I hate to say it, but I think sometimes daycare workers look for any reason to send a child home if the child is being difficult (or the teacher is having a bad day). While I won't go as far to suggest a teacher is making up a temperature reading, there have been one or two times when I was asked to pick up my son because he had a fever - but when I got to him he was fine.
If they do get a fever reading, they have to send the child home. But I would watch out for this becoming a habitual problem (assuming the child isn't really sick). Although it could be they just noted your child's fussiness as another sign he/she may be sick - not as the real reason they wanted to send him/her home.
Anonymous wrote:If they get a fever reading, period, they ask the parents to come and get the child. it does not matter if the fever is brief, or inaccurate, for that matter. This happened to me fairly often, but you really can't do much about it.
Anonymous wrote:
It is protocol for teachers to contact the parents when a baby's temperature hits 100. But, I have never heard of a daycare professional having a parent pick up a child for being fussy. Uh, handling a fussy child is a fundamental part of being a caregiver, is it not?
Anonymous wrote:I am mostly troubled by the fact that they actually told me she was having a fever, but in less an hour she doesn't.