Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can everyone give OP a break? My babies were born during "normal times," and even then I did receive guidance from our pediatrician about health issues (both were born in winter) about flu, whooping cough, etc.
My pediatrician absolutely advised us about grandparents getting vaccines, etc. He said on-mouth kisses are a definite no, and he advised that kisses go on the top of the head, etc.
OP is just trying to go off of medical advice from a pediatrician during a pandemic, yes? This must be a scary time to be a new parent. How about just a wee bit of grace?
+1
We got the same advice. Blame it on your doctor if you need to.
I really don't think "no kissing" is such a big deal. And it is perfectly reasonable to set boundaries. It's your kid and you know what is best. Don't lose confidence on this because of people here.
One other thing I'd watch out for is safe sleep. My MIL really pushed napping with my baby. Lots of "I did it with my kids and it was fine." That was a hard no and very annoying to deal with.
Anonymous wrote:Can everyone give OP a break? My babies were born during "normal times," and even then I did receive guidance from our pediatrician about health issues (both were born in winter) about flu, whooping cough, etc.
My pediatrician absolutely advised us about grandparents getting vaccines, etc. He said on-mouth kisses are a definite no, and he advised that kisses go on the top of the head, etc.
OP is just trying to go off of medical advice from a pediatrician during a pandemic, yes? This must be a scary time to be a new parent. How about just a wee bit of grace?
Anonymous wrote:Can everyone give OP a break? My babies were born during "normal times," and even then I did receive guidance from our pediatrician about health issues (both were born in winter) about flu, whooping cough, etc.
My pediatrician absolutely advised us about grandparents getting vaccines, etc. He said on-mouth kisses are a definite no, and he advised that kisses go on the top of the head, etc.
OP is just trying to go off of medical advice from a pediatrician during a pandemic, yes? This must be a scary time to be a new parent. How about just a wee bit of grace?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, will you walk in with a list of rules?
+1
OP- don't be that parent
OP - are they your parents or the in-laws? If the former, they already know you are insane and the rules won't phase them. Don't pay attention to these other posters. If its the in-laws, maybe tone it down some? Like from a 10 down to a 2?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, will you walk in with a list of rules?
+1
OP- don't be that parent
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the kissing part - if you’re concerned about the baby catching something, I don’t see how a grandparent kissing the baby will somehow meaningfully increase the risk unless you’re not planning to let the grandparents hold the baby either. Ten minutes of holding the baby and any respiratory germs they have will be all over your baby.
As for screen time, what kind of limitations are you talking about? Is everyone expected to have the tv off any time the baby is around, or are you just talking about not parking the baby in from of Sesame Street?
The kissing part is about oral herpes (which 50% of the population has), not COVID.
Do the grandparents have oral herpes?
You realize this is crazy, right? If 50% of the population has oral herpes than we’d hear of millions of babies with it. Kissing babies is an action as old as time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the kissing part - if you’re concerned about the baby catching something, I don’t see how a grandparent kissing the baby will somehow meaningfully increase the risk unless you’re not planning to let the grandparents hold the baby either. Ten minutes of holding the baby and any respiratory germs they have will be all over your baby.
As for screen time, what kind of limitations are you talking about? Is everyone expected to have the tv off any time the baby is around, or are you just talking about not parking the baby in from of Sesame Street?
The kissing part is about oral herpes (which 50% of the population has), not COVID.
Has OP confirmed that neither she nor her spouse have it? And this is a permanent and forever ban on the grandparents ever kissing their children?
Seems like a bit of an overreaction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the kissing part - if you’re concerned about the baby catching something, I don’t see how a grandparent kissing the baby will somehow meaningfully increase the risk unless you’re not planning to let the grandparents hold the baby either. Ten minutes of holding the baby and any respiratory germs they have will be all over your baby.
As for screen time, what kind of limitations are you talking about? Is everyone expected to have the tv off any time the baby is around, or are you just talking about not parking the baby in from of Sesame Street?
The kissing part is about oral herpes (which 50% of the population has), not COVID.