Me, Grimlock! wrote:She's two and doesn't understand enough to protect herself; she'll suck her fingers moments after wiping her nose.
That's no problem. Those are her bugs. We all have our own little colony of bugs living inside us, and up us and on us et cetera and they're pretty harmless to us because our body's environment is geared up to be hospitable to them.
We're doing the species no favour by not letting kids be kids. Sure, kids died in droves 100 years ago, but its 2009, take into account good medical science, fresh water and anti-botics, what would have snuffed a kid 100 years ago won't even cause them a sniffle now. But children need to be allowed to develop their own immune system.
Its like this peanut and soy allergy thing. There's a lot of it in Western children and parents are told "don't give your babies soy or peanuts to stop them developing allergy" but I have friends from Africa and they've said that babies over there drink a lot of peanut and soy derived milk and foods because they don't have a lot of dairy, and yet there's pretty much zero percent soy and nut allergy.
Generally, people don't give their immune systems a lot of credit.
Compounded by parents who send their kids to daycare sick or well, that worries me. All I can suggest is that the daycare worker refuses kids that are sick.
You should be more worried about kids who are coming to daycare who aren't vaccinated, because those little tykes could be brewing up a super strand of the disease all the other kids are vaccinated against. But people over react to normal cold and flu, kids need to catch these things and as long as they have good parents who don't tie them out in the yard with a sack to sleep in, they'll be fine.
The Noro/Roto/GI viruses are the ones you gotta watch for, not because the virus itself will kill you or the kid, the dehydration can cause issues - but dehyrdation can be dealt with.
Thankfully my daughter goes to a home daycare where the number of kids is low (five). But she'll be in school in two or three years, and if H1N1 is here to stay, combined with the regular bugs, I'd better get very informed very quickly.
Teach your kid good hand hygiene. Wash before meals, after the toilet, use her own chapstick/hankies/whatever and teach her to nag other kids to put their hands over their mouths when they cough. Honestly, that's all anyone really needs to do. We all get sick, and to try and avoid illness like cold and flu is actually doing more harm then good.
All this paranoia about colds and flus and bacteria, and using all these sprays and flu vaccinations its taking the job out of the hands of our immune systems and then the immune system gets "bored" for lack of a better term and can turn on itself or develop a nice wad of allergies.
If it were just my wife and me, I'd just take the regular precautions. But with my daughter, who is part of those "higher risk" groups based on her young age, I have to consider the shots.
Kids have great immune systems, we just have to let them do what they do best. I mean, how many of us as kids in the 80s and before were taken to the doctor to get anti-botics whenever we got a sniffle, when I was crook as a kid I was given a hot water bottle, plenty of fluids, jelly and bed rest, none of this damn poly-pharmacy that we see today.
The only thing you need to watch is sore throats, if the kid is always getting a sore throat with fever you need to get to the doctor in case it blows up into a case of Rheumatic fever, it won't kill quickly, but it can cause a bit of damage in the long term.
Oh, and good diet helps out too.
And that's my long winded health rant for the day.
