Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those saying your dc will get sick more, it's okay to get sick. It is probably healthy to be exposed to more earlier (for a dc who follows the recommended vaccine schedule, obviously). This is clearly not scientific but the dc I stayed home with has food allergies (COVID baby) and the dc who went to daycare does not. That's a one off but studies do show that early germ exposure does have fewer instances of food allergies... something to consider at least!
Link to a study you might find interesting... https://www.aaaai.org/about/news/news/2024/daycare
but avoiding rsv in the first year of life can decrease chance of asthma... and rsv is rampant in daycares
https://www.nih.gov/news-events/nih-research-matters/avoiding-rsv-infancy-reduces-asthma-risk
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those saying your dc will get sick more, it's okay to get sick. It is probably healthy to be exposed to more earlier (for a dc who follows the recommended vaccine schedule, obviously). This is clearly not scientific but the dc I stayed home with has food allergies (COVID baby) and the dc who went to daycare does not. That's a one off but studies do show that early germ exposure does have fewer instances of food allergies... something to consider at least!
Link to a study you might find interesting... https://www.aaaai.org/about/news/news/2024/daycare
Anonymous wrote:I went the daycare route with my first and nanny with my twins. Both were fine but I preferred daycare. In daycare, there are multiple people in the room, a director watching the cameras, you and other parents watching the cameras. It felt much more secure than trusting one person with the most important person in the world to me. The twins' nanny was great but I think we got extremely lucky, the majority of nannies I see are totally disengaged - chatting to each other while the kid watches their phone in the stroller. And how are the parents to know? They think their db is out for a lovely stroll with the nanny.
Anonymous wrote:For those saying your dc will get sick more, it's okay to get sick. It is probably healthy to be exposed to more earlier (for a dc who follows the recommended vaccine schedule, obviously). This is clearly not scientific but the dc I stayed home with has food allergies (COVID baby) and the dc who went to daycare does not. That's a one off but studies do show that early germ exposure does have fewer instances of food allergies... something to consider at least!
Anonymous wrote:I went the daycare route with my first and nanny with my twins. Both were fine but I preferred daycare. In daycare, there are multiple people in the room, a director watching the cameras, you and other parents watching the cameras. It felt much more secure than trusting one person with the most important person in the world to me. The twins' nanny was great but I think we got extremely lucky, the majority of nannies I see are totally disengaged - chatting to each other while the kid watches their phone in the stroller. And how are the parents to know? They think their db is out for a lovely stroll with the nanny.
Anonymous wrote:For those saying your dc will get sick more, it's okay to get sick. It is probably healthy to be exposed to more earlier (for a dc who follows the recommended vaccine schedule, obviously). This is clearly not scientific but the dc I stayed home with has food allergies (COVID baby) and the dc who went to daycare does not. That's a one off but studies do show that early germ exposure does have fewer instances of food allergies... something to consider at least!
Anonymous wrote:You say that you both work demanding jobs outside the home. No matter which option you pick, at least one of you will probably have to cut back at work somewhat to handle all of the stuff that comes up when you have young children. Kids get sick. Nannies get sick. Daycares have holidays. Snow days happen. No childcare solution is going to allow both of you to work at the same capacity as you did before you had a kid. You will have to be flexible.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve done both and if I could do it over, I would have put my first baby in a nanny share instead of daycare at 3 months. He’s 5 now and fine. A good nanny is hands down better than a daycare, but most nannies aren’t very good.