Anonymous wrote:This happened to me and I went crazy. It is fine to do regular diaper checks but you must change poppy diapers. After horrible diaper rash incidents, which I photographed, I went to the director and insisted that an incident report be written. The teacher had to check every hour and initial a schedule that she had done so. Frankly, I thought someone should've been fired. It is neglect.
Anonymous wrote:No no no. Kids have regular and frequent diaper changes and if they poop, they get changed immediately. In my years of daycare I have never had a kid get a diaper rash on my watch.
Anonymous wrote:This is not normal at all. I have been sending DD to a center for a year now and she has not gotten diaper rash. The few times she's red there from constipation (hard stool) they applied cream. In fact, more diligently than we do. It's definitely a valid concern.
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely not. I would be furious! My two year old gets a mild red color on his bum and the caregivers at the center immediately start changing him every hour, putting diaper cream on, and constantly checking for a dirty diaper in between. The warmer weather means more sweat and humidity trapped under the diaper so try to go bare bottom at home if you can.
So sorry for your son! Sounds painful. He should not be sitting in a dirty diaper and they need to figure out a way to solve that problem.
Anonymous wrote:I think his caregivers would smell a dirty diaper, he shouldn't have to tell them. If it were me, I would wonder what other things they are ignoring. I'm sorry your son was in pain. You should have a direct conversation with his caregivers and the director. Hopefully this can be avoided in the future. Just a thought, is it possible your son has a food allergy or intolerance that could lead to rashes?
Anonymous wrote:I think his caregivers would smell a dirty diaper, he shouldn't have to tell them. If it were me, I would wonder what other things they are ignoring. I'm sorry your son was in pain. You should have a direct conversation with his caregivers and the director. Hopefully this can be avoided in the future. Just a thought, is it possible your son has a food allergy or intolerance that could lead to rashes?