Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even in non Covid times I was very protective of my newborn in the winter. I worried about rsv, flu, colds and the possibility of my newborn getting a spinal tap. The older child was bathed and changed once she got home and when she inevitably got sick separated from the newborn. Fortunately I had a caregiver that was able to separate from the toddler while I took care of the sick older child. It’s really hard and you may consider keeping the older one home until the newborn no longer needs a spinal tap if he or she gets sick.
Did you allow visitors to see the newborn, or wait until after the 8-week period?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even in non Covid times I was very protective of my newborn in the winter. I worried about rsv, flu, colds and the possibility of my newborn getting a spinal tap. The older child was bathed and changed once she got home and when she inevitably got sick separated from the newborn. Fortunately I had a caregiver that was able to separate from the toddler while I took care of the sick older child. It’s really hard and you may consider keeping the older one home until the newborn no longer needs a spinal tap if he or she gets sick.
Did you allow visitors to see the newborn, or wait until after the 8-week period?
Anonymous wrote:Even in non Covid times I was very protective of my newborn in the winter. I worried about rsv, flu, colds and the possibility of my newborn getting a spinal tap. The older child was bathed and changed once she got home and when she inevitably got sick separated from the newborn. Fortunately I had a caregiver that was able to separate from the toddler while I took care of the sick older child. It’s really hard and you may consider keeping the older one home until the newborn no longer needs a spinal tap if he or she gets sick.
Anonymous wrote:Would you be this cautious of the flu or other illnesses? I truly don’t understand. This has been going on for two years. Do you really know kids who have died or were severely damaged from covid?
I’m not trying to be mean, but I don’t understand how covid becomes such a focus for a mom. I can see being concerned about RSV when there is a lot going around. I definitely understand being scared of passing on covid to someone who is elderly. Or being scared of a backyard pool when you have a young child. But covid?? You realize most people with covid right now have a mild cold?
Anonymous wrote:I would pull the older one out until the wave passes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you be this cautious of the flu or other illnesses? I truly don’t understand. This has been going on for two years. Do you really know kids who have died or were severely damaged from covid?
I’m not trying to be mean, but I don’t understand how covid becomes such a focus for a mom. I can see being concerned about RSV when there is a lot going around. I definitely understand being scared of passing on covid to someone who is elderly. Or being scared of a backyard pool when you have a young child. But covid?? You realize most people with covid right now have a mild cold?
If a neonate gets a fever they get admitted and a spinal tap. It's not covid, it's the age
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you be this cautious of the flu or other illnesses? I truly don’t understand. This has been going on for two years. Do you really know kids who have died or were severely damaged from covid?
I’m not trying to be mean, but I don’t understand how covid becomes such a focus for a mom. I can see being concerned about RSV when there is a lot going around. I definitely understand being scared of passing on covid to someone who is elderly. Or being scared of a backyard pool when you have a young child. But covid?? You realize most people with covid right now have a mild cold?
If a neonate gets a fever they get admitted and a spinal tap. It's not covid, it's the age
At what age do infants no longer need to be admitted for a spinal tap when presenting with a fever?
Anonymous wrote:Pull your kid out of preschool and put your nanny on leave until baby is 6weeks old. After that live normally. You don't need to do anything for covid that you wouldn't do for flu when it comes to babies and kids. The data are very clear that kids do not get very sick from covid. The neonate period is the exception.