I agree and I wouldn't hire anyone with a chronic physical illness to be a nanny either. As pointed out, there are other professions more suited for people who are chronically ill. |
Drama? Because someone asked if they were loved enough as a child when they were hostile? Oh, ok. |
So happy you finally seem to understand! Thank you so much for posting your "ok". |
Yikes pp.
You don't sound ready to be someone's employer. |
I don't know if I am the PP to whom you are referring but I already am "someone's employer" - over 45 people in fact - including a nanny. And while I would hire someone with a mental illness for a job in my company, I would not hire someone with a mental illness to be my child's nanny. End of discussion. |
+1. I realize that this is a catch-22: if you don't disclose a condition, you can't request reasonable accommodations, and you may lose your job for performance issues that could be explained if NF knew your condition. But disclose it, and probably most NFs won't hire you. I'm not going to hire anyone with a chronic medical condition if I know about it, unless it has been under control for years, and the person can assure me that it has literally no effect on their ability to show up on time, stay all day, and do the job. I feel like anyone in that situation wouldn't think to disclose it, because it doesn't matter. Anyone who does feel the need to disclose it, probably knows she'll need special consideration (or might need). As a PP said, you are the sole employee, tasked with caring for people too young to take care of themselves if you have an attack of whatever it is. Go work somewhere where a sudden emergency or decompensation won't mean that there's no one to cover. |
Nanny with bipolar; sorry to hijack your thread op |
I do understand mental illnesses and am very familiar with the side-effects of the treatment drugs, and I would not hire nor keep in my employ a nanny who was on those drugs or diagnosed with any mental illness. OP, I strongly suggest you find another profession.
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What kind of sudden decompensation do you think you see with depression? Schizophrenia? Mania? Alcohol abuse? These things don't happen overnight. It's not like a seizure disorder. |
First of all, at least one of the nannies posting here is bipolar. So, yes, I worry about mania, delusions, even hallucinations. Anyone who has lived with someone with bipolar disorder knows the meds don't always work all the time. Another nanny takes a "low dose" of a bezodiazepine every day. I am not allowed to drug test her or ask her for medical records that prove her dose is low enough not to affect reflexes or cognition. So, yes, I worry about someone on a mood- and cognition-altering substance carrying, driving, and watching my child in the water, near streets, or in other potentially dangerous situations. I mean, I can ask for those things, but I'm sure you'd agree with that about as much as you agree with me not hiring her in the first place. But even with your garden-variety depression, one of the problems is that a nanny works with children. She sees other adults sporadically during the week. Some don't see any other adults regularly at all during the workday. MB and DB see her for a little while in the AM, and probably even less in the PM, time spent rushing around getting ready for work or handing over care. I'm not going to notice my nanny getting quieter or less active, or that she seems sad or disconnected. I will see none of those gradual signs of a worsening depression. Meanwhile, she may be barely interacting with my child, sleeping on the sofa, not taking my child out, or otherwise doing very little actual nannying. This is the best case scenario of an unrecognized worsening depression. Worst case, she starts self-harming behavior. Someone with true clinical depression does not need to be working in isolation with sole care for a child. This is true for a parent or a caregiver. It's a recipe for disaster for the one suffering from depression and for potential tragedy for the child. Now, if you're like a lot of Americans who take anti-depressants just because you find life a little hard, then just keep it to yourself when you apply for my job, I'll never find out, and it won't matter. |
"Are you on any anti-anxiety or antidepressant medication and/or are you bipolar of suffer from any mental illness?" is now a question I will ask when I begin interviewing nannies.
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Wow.
So I guess that since mentally ill people should not be left alone at all to care for young children, then ANY person w/a mental illness should never be in full charge of a young child. Including parents. There goes that logic. Out the window. |
Illegal. |
If you cannot see the difference between nannies and parents then I can not help you. You need to find. A different profession. |
1) Not all mental illnesses are the same. 2) A parent presumably has at least one other person (the other parent) observing them on a daily basis for more than a few minutes, and would recognize decompensation if it happened. 3) Many, many mentally ill parents, including a lot of women with PPD, absolutely should not be caring for children on their own, both for their own health and the safety of the children. This is where universally accessible, affordable, quality daycare could actually be a public health service. 4) Those of us raised by parents with a mental illness, including depression, bipolar, anxiety, etc., would tell you that even medicated, these are not benign syndromes. |