Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a 2 year old who has been hospitalized twice so far, and also had a stay in the NICU after she was born. For the NICU stay, there were no parent beds, so I went home after I was discharged, and came to visit at regular intervals during the day. She didn't really know if we weren't there, and there wasn't a ton we could do for her, as we could only hold her for short amounts of time. For the two stays as a toddler, either my husband or I was at her side 24/7. I was lucky that my job is relatively flexible so I could take PTO and make up some hours, but it was really hard and I thought often about how I had no idea what I would have done if I had an inflexible job and/or was a single parent. Having been through that, I could see leaving an older elementary kid who would be okay watching movies and might sleep on their own for periods of time, depending on how serious the situation was and how long the stay was.
Genuine question - how do those in difficult circumstances (for example, single parent with other kids, or parents with inflexible jobs) make it work to leave an active, curious toddler in a hospital room alone even for short amounts of time? I have a ton of sympathy for them and know most wouldn't choose that, but I'm having trouble imagining how it would work. How to avoid the toddler pulling out IVs, sneaking out of the room, etc? I felt like I couldn't even leave to grab a glass of water in case she decided to jump out of bed and follow.
I am another former pediatric nurse and we would put a toddler into a special crib called a "high climber". It has very tall sides and prevents the child from climbing out. IV's are splinted and taped heavily to prevent accidental dislodgement. I worked at JHH, and it was always taken into consideration when doing the daily assignment if a child's (especially a toddler's!) parent wasn't staying with them. They would need much more care with feeding, diaper changes, safety, etc. All things a parent would take care of if there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I have a child with a chronic condition on her tenth hospitalization. She's now 12 and has never been alone even for the time it would take to get coffee. I just get amazed each time I'm here how many kids are in their rooms totally alone. Little kids and babies. It makes me sad.
I'm so sorry about your child. Not everyone has the economic freedom you have to stay with their child at all times. Judge less and if you are inclined, visit with a child who is alone.
-former pediatric nurse
Anonymous wrote:I had a NICU baby who stayed in for 88 days. I had 2 older kids at home. I went back to work when she stabilized around 5 weeks. I had to save my maternity leave for when she actually got home. I got A LOT of judgement for it from nurses and other moms. Thank GOD I joined a NICU support group and met lots of women who had to do the exact same thing. I worked from 8- 5, went home and got my other 2 kids settled and went to the NICU around 9pm and spent the night. DH went to NICU straight from work from 5pm and came home around 830 so we could switch. I am not proud of it but I knew she wouldn't be permitted to go to daycare till 12 months so i was already going to be hiring a nanny which was way more money then I had expected so every day of leave and every hour of pay counted for me. I also am the one to carry my families health insurance. Please don't judge unless you've been in a similar situation. No on WANTS to leave their child at a hospital.
Anonymous wrote:I have a 2 year old who has been hospitalized twice so far, and also had a stay in the NICU after she was born. For the NICU stay, there were no parent beds, so I went home after I was discharged, and came to visit at regular intervals during the day. She didn't really know if we weren't there, and there wasn't a ton we could do for her, as we could only hold her for short amounts of time. For the two stays as a toddler, either my husband or I was at her side 24/7. I was lucky that my job is relatively flexible so I could take PTO and make up some hours, but it was really hard and I thought often about how I had no idea what I would have done if I had an inflexible job and/or was a single parent. Having been through that, I could see leaving an older elementary kid who would be okay watching movies and might sleep on their own for periods of time, depending on how serious the situation was and how long the stay was.
Genuine question - how do those in difficult circumstances (for example, single parent with other kids, or parents with inflexible jobs) make it work to leave an active, curious toddler in a hospital room alone even for short amounts of time? I have a ton of sympathy for them and know most wouldn't choose that, but I'm having trouble imagining how it would work. How to avoid the toddler pulling out IVs, sneaking out of the room, etc? I felt like I couldn't even leave to grab a glass of water in case she decided to jump out of bed and follow.
Anonymous wrote:I left my NICU baby alone in the hospital. So I'd say 0 days old.
Anonymous wrote:I thought this was going to be a post about someone wondering if their child was old enough to be left alone in the hospital. That might be worth discussion. But no, it's someone who wants to gloat that she does not even pee for days on end when her child is in the hospital. I need to quit DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I have a child with a chronic condition on her tenth hospitalization. She's now 12 and has never been alone even for the time it would take to get coffee. I just get amazed each time I'm here how many kids are in their rooms totally alone. Little kids and babies. It makes me sad.
Why?! How crappy is this hospital that you don't think that your DD is going to be ok for 15 minutes by herself???
Medical mistakes happen far too often. I wouldn't leave my kid alone in a hospital room unless I really didn't have a choice (e.g. other kids at home and no caregiver/NICU with no overnight accommodations with parents/my ability to keep insurance or a roof over our head is in jeopardy), until my kid is old enough to reach out to me to tell me that someone has come in to give them something. It sounds like OP's kid may not be there.
My elderly mother, who is 100% with it cognitively, was in the hospital with a broken bone. i asked her to let me stay but she was embarrassed. That night the nurse made a significant error. I wish I'd pushed harder.
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Anonymous wrote:OP here. I have a child with a chronic condition on her tenth hospitalization. She's now 12 and has never been alone even for the time it would take to get coffee. I just get amazed each time I'm here how many kids are in their rooms totally alone. Little kids and babies. It makes me sad.
Anonymous wrote:I have a 2 year old who has been hospitalized twice so far, and also had a stay in the NICU after she was born. For the NICU stay, there were no parent beds, so I went home after I was discharged, and came to visit at regular intervals during the day. She didn't really know if we weren't there, and there wasn't a ton we could do for her, as we could only hold her for short amounts of time. For the two stays as a toddler, either my husband or I was at her side 24/7. I was lucky that my job is relatively flexible so I could take PTO and make up some hours, but it was really hard and I thought often about how I had no idea what I would have done if I had an inflexible job and/or was a single parent. Having been through that, I could see leaving an older elementary kid who would be okay watching movies and might sleep on their own for periods of time, depending on how serious the situation was and how long the stay was.
Genuine question - how do those in difficult circumstances (for example, single parent with other kids, or parents with inflexible jobs) make it work to leave an active, curious toddler in a hospital room alone even for short amounts of time? I have a ton of sympathy for them and know most wouldn't choose that, but I'm having trouble imagining how it would work. How to avoid the toddler pulling out IVs, sneaking out of the room, etc? I felt like I couldn't even leave to grab a glass of water in case she decided to jump out of bed and follow.