Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I care far less about my pediatrician doing it than my friggin' vet doing it. THAT bothered me.
I'm with you on that. I love my dog but I don't have "Furbabies" or whatever stupid term people use.
Anonymous wrote:I care far less about my pediatrician doing it than my friggin' vet doing it. THAT bothered me.
Anonymous wrote:PP 20:38 here. First of all, when your baby is in the NICU there is no "easy route."
No I wasn't asking for the "good job mom" nurse's help. But I got lots of "good job mom" comments from her for mundane infant care tasks such as BFing and diaper changing. It was like a running commentary. let's just say that when totally sleep deprived and sitting on an uncomfortable chair 2 days after a vaginal delivery, it was irritating.
Anonymous wrote:It annoyed me when my son was in the NICU. esp when I'd be BFing and the nurse would say "good job mom." I just kept dreaming of being home on the couch with my baby instead of nursing for an audience (and no the nurse was not helping me with BFing, she was just walking by). it still makes my skin crawl.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How hard is it for the nurse or doctor to introduce herself and be told the parent or caregiver's name in reply?
i'm a pediatric sub-specialist; i always offer my name and my hand. i get a name back from the parent maybe 20% of the time.
i think it would be weird/rude to stop and say "so, what's your name?"
Anonymous wrote:How hard is it for the nurse or doctor to introduce herself and be told the parent or caregiver's name in reply?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD was in the ER just the other day, and believe me, I wouldn't have cared WHAT the doc called me -- as long as she remained focused on helping and calming my DD. As it happened, she called me "mom," and at the time, I remembered that there were people annoyed by this, and I thought to myself, "why would anyone care about how the doc is addressing the parent when caring for the child?" I just don't get it. The doc was great with my kid, as were the nurses, who also called me "mom." I am so thankful for their help. Thank you nurses and Dr in the Suburban ER last Friday night!
And guess what -- I don't remember their names either. And I might have called them "Doctor" and "Nurse," which were their roles in the moment. My role? Mom.
Thank you and we need more people like you in the world.