Anonymous wrote:The family I nanny for have a changing pad on bathroom sing with a basket of diapers & baby soap washcloth. It really is easy to clean baby that way. He never gets a diaper rash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's cultural with the wipes.
I had a nanny that refused to used them and washed baby's bum after each poop. I thought it was strange but she was wonderful so wasn't worth making a big deal over it
OP here,
That's good to know. It was definitely weird for me. I asked the mom where do you keep the wipes? She looked at me and said we don't use wipes, please wash babies bottom after diaper change. It doesn't matter if the baby peed or poop. So uncomfortable, carrying a kid with poop on his bottom to the kitchen sink. Poop all over the kitchen counter and trying to wipe him with napkins, getting the water temperature in the sink correctly, and rinsing baby, dry baby with towel and finally baby wearing diaper. I want it to leave right after that incident. I held myself in and finished my shift at 5:30 p.m.
Geez oh Pete.
1. Turn on the water, warm it up to the right temperature, have a baby washcloth handy.
2. Change the child by the tub, on a mat on the floor. Take off the diaper.
3. As you take off the diaper, use the edge/front to wipe a bit. Lift the child into the tub, supporting appropriately.
4. Rinse/wash and diaper.
The whole process takes roughly the same amount of time that using wipes does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's cultural with the wipes.
I had a nanny that refused to used them and washed baby's bum after each poop. I thought it was strange but she was wonderful so wasn't worth making a big deal over it
OP here,
That's good to know. It was definitely weird for me. I asked the mom where do you keep the wipes? She looked at me and said we don't use wipes, please wash babies bottom after diaper change. It doesn't matter if the baby peed or poop. So uncomfortable, carrying a kid with poop on his bottom to the kitchen sink. Poop all over the kitchen counter and trying to wipe him with napkins, getting the water temperature in the sink correctly, and rinsing baby, dry baby with towel and finally baby wearing diaper. I want it to leave right after that incident. I held myself in and finished my shift at 5:30 p.m.
Geez oh Pete.
1. Turn on the water, warm it up to the right temperature, have a baby washcloth handy.
2. Change the child by the tub, on a mat on the floor. Take off the diaper.
3. As you take off the diaper, use the edge/front to wipe a bit. Lift the child into the tub, supporting appropriately.
4. Rinse/wash and diaper.
The whole process takes roughly the same amount of time that using wipes does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's cultural with the wipes.
I had a nanny that refused to used them and washed baby's bum after each poop. I thought it was strange but she was wonderful so wasn't worth making a big deal over it
OP here,
That's good to know. It was definitely weird for me. I asked the mom where do you keep the wipes? She looked at me and said we don't use wipes, please wash babies bottom after diaper change. It doesn't matter if the baby peed or poop. So uncomfortable, carrying a kid with poop on his bottom to the kitchen sink. Poop all over the kitchen counter and trying to wipe him with napkins, getting the water temperature in the sink correctly, and rinsing baby, dry baby with towel and finally baby wearing diaper. I want it to leave right after that incident. I held myself in and finished my shift at 5:30 p.m.
Geez oh Pete.
1. Turn on the water, warm it up to the right temperature, have a baby washcloth handy.
2. Change the child by the tub, on a mat on the floor. Take off the diaper.
3. As you take off the diaper, use the edge/front to wipe a bit. Lift the child into the tub, supporting appropriately.
4. Rinse/wash and diaper.
The whole process takes roughly the same amount of time that using wipes does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's cultural with the wipes.
I had a nanny that refused to used them and washed baby's bum after each poop. I thought it was strange but she was wonderful so wasn't worth making a big deal over it
OP here,
That's good to know. It was definitely weird for me. I asked the mom where do you keep the wipes? She looked at me and said we don't use wipes, please wash babies bottom after diaper change. It doesn't matter if the baby peed or poop. So uncomfortable, carrying a kid with poop on his bottom to the kitchen sink. Poop all over the kitchen counter and trying to wipe him with napkins, getting the water temperature in the sink correctly, and rinsing baby, dry baby with towel and finally baby wearing diaper. I want it to leave right after that incident. I held myself in and finished my shift at 5:30 p.m.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will start: washing and cleaning babies bottom with water only. No wipes provided at all. At the beginning of interviews, I always ask the parents how they clean their children. If they mention that they don't use wipes. That's my clue that things are going to be difficult with this job. I have nothing against parents how they raise their children but, when you hire somebody to do it for you, don't expect nannies to touch poops all day long.
There’s nothing wrong with soft, baby washcloths…. Most people who choose to use cloth diapers skip wipes.
Anonymous wrote:I will start: washing and cleaning babies bottom with water only. No wipes provided at all. At the beginning of interviews, I always ask the parents how they clean their children. If they mention that they don't use wipes. That's my clue that things are going to be difficult with this job. I have nothing against parents how they raise their children but, when you hire somebody to do it for you, don't expect nannies to touch poops all day long.
Anonymous wrote:It’s common in Muslim cultures to wash the baby’s bottom under running water after a poop. That said, they use wipes first! Who wants pieces of poop in their sink or tub!
Anonymous wrote:It's cultural with the wipes.
I had a nanny that refused to used them and washed baby's bum after each poop. I thought it was strange but she was wonderful so wasn't worth making a big deal over it[/quote
OP here,
That's good to know. It was definitely weird for me. I asked the mom where do you keep the wipes? She looked at me and said we don't use wipes, please wash babies bottom after diaper change. It doesn't matter if the baby peed or poop. So uncomfortable, carrying a kid with poop on his bottom to the kitchen sink. Poop all over the kitchen counter and trying to wipe him with napkins, getting the water temperature in the sink correctly, and rinsing baby, dry baby with towel and finally baby wearing diaper. I want it to leave right after that incident. I held myself in and finished my shift at 5:30 p.m.