Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pediatrician’s office called as they are now taking well visits but requiring masks for 2 and up. My almost two year old will have turned two before th I his two year old appointment but won’t wear a mask. I tried to even get it close to his face and he gasps and pulls it off.
Do you think masks will still be required if we postponed the appointment and also, we vaccinate would this get off schedule?
You are the parent and you tell your child that the mask is required to be kept on during doctor visit and there is no choice. I would raise holy hell if all children were wearing mandatory mask except your little snowflake. No other parent wants to take the risk if your spoiled brat spreading the virus!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pediatrician’s office called as they are now taking well visits but requiring masks for 2 and up. My almost two year old will have turned two before th I his two year old appointment but won’t wear a mask. I tried to even get it close to his face and he gasps and pulls it off.
Do you think masks will still be required if we postponed the appointment and also, we vaccinate would this get off schedule?
You are the parent and you tell your child that the mask is required to be kept on during doctor visit and there is no choice. I would raise holy hell if all children were wearing mandatory mask except your little snowflake. No other parent wants to take the risk if your spoiled brat spreading the virus!
Anonymous wrote:Pediatrician’s office called as they are now taking well visits but requiring masks for 2 and up. My almost two year old will have turned two before th I his two year old appointment but won’t wear a mask. I tried to even get it close to his face and he gasps and pulls it off.
Do you think masks will still be required if we postponed the appointment and also, we vaccinate would this get off schedule?
Anonymous wrote:If there are no vaccines needed at the appointment, I'd just skip it. Not worth the hassle.
But I understand your dilemma. I actually do not want my 4 year old to wear a mask because it makes him touch his face MORE, and is really not effective at preventing spread of anything. I get the sentiment, but it's poorly thought out for children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if your child is 2 and 3 weeks old I really don't think they're going to turn you away. The risk of having an unvaccinated toddler running around is far greater than having a poorly masked or unmasked child in the office.
One tip to consider: would your child wear a character mask? Like a superhero or Paw Patrol or something? It's been a while since I had a 2 yo, but could you pick his favorite character and say "today the doctor is giving ice cream to every Spiderman that comes to the office!" and then get him ice cream, regardless, because whatever.
Except you can't take him to get ice cream after because everything is closed.
I'd do what you can. Bring the mask, attempt to put it on, but don't freak out. My 3.5 year old wouldn't wear it either. I'd maybe be able to bribe him, but delayed gratification is VERY hard at age 2. Waiting more than a minute for the bribe is impossible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if your child is 2 and 3 weeks old I really don't think they're going to turn you away. The risk of having an unvaccinated toddler running around is far greater than having a poorly masked or unmasked child in the office.
One tip to consider: would your child wear a character mask? Like a superhero or Paw Patrol or something? It's been a while since I had a 2 yo, but could you pick his favorite character and say "today the doctor is giving ice cream to every Spiderman that comes to the office!" and then get him ice cream, regardless, because whatever.
Except you can't take him to get ice cream after because everything is closed.
I'd do what you can. Bring the mask, attempt to put it on, but don't freak out. My 3.5 year old wouldn't wear it either. I'd maybe be able to bribe him, but delayed gratification is VERY hard at age 2. Waiting more than a minute for the bribe is impossible.
Anonymous wrote:if your child is 2 and 3 weeks old I really don't think they're going to turn you away. The risk of having an unvaccinated toddler running around is far greater than having a poorly masked or unmasked child in the office.
One tip to consider: would your child wear a character mask? Like a superhero or Paw Patrol or something? It's been a while since I had a 2 yo, but could you pick his favorite character and say "today the doctor is giving ice cream to every Spiderman that comes to the office!" and then get him ice cream, regardless, because whatever.