Anonymous wrote:Please, please just tell me that you don't want to work with my kid who has allergies and let me move on and you move on to a job with a "normal" kid. This is so much more trouble than it's worth.
Anonymous wrote:I am nanny to a 2 yo charge with multiple food allergies. We have been able to avoid adverse reactions with prevention techniques, like not having any allergens in the house. So I have never administered the epi-pen. Now that she is getting older and more independent I feel the risk is higher. Just past week she licked a discarded candy wrapper left on the floor at Gymboree.
I would like to find training for epi-pen administration here in the DC area. I am also interested to hear from anyone familiar with the liability side of it. Would it be greater liability to refuse a child life saving medication then to give it and possibly injure the child or not have given it fast enough?
Anonymous wrote:Training? The things are designed to be used by children and are basically idiot-proof. You jam it into the thigh and count. There is no way you can mess up the dosage and unless, like PP noted, you poke a kid in the eye or chest with it, you can't really do it wrong.
I'd be really worried about your first aid skills in general, as your MB, if you expressed the need for formal training on this basic task.