My mom and brother were here for the week last week. LB started waking up a lot during the night, we thought it was teething, but when her temperature spiked at 104F/40C on Wednesday night, it was time to take her to the doctor. Tom and I took her to a pediatrician walk-in clinic and got there 10 minutes after it opened. Even so, there was already a 1 1/2 hour wait. So we drove back home, switched the car seats to my mom's car, Tom went to work and my mom and I took the kiddies back to the Dr. 2 hours later. She waited in the car with LG and I went into the clinic with LB. I STILL had to wait over half an hour. LB fell asleep in my lap which was really odd behaviour for her. The Dr. assisting the pediatrician came to see us first. She looked in LB's ears, and to do that I had to pin LB's head to my chest and her arms against herself, which didn't help matters since she was already scared and upset. Then she tried to look down LB's throat, but LB bit down on the popsicle stick so the lady had to GAG LB to get her to open her mouth. :( Everything looked good, so then the actual pediatrician came in and repeated all the checks, so LB got gagged again.
When they found out she's not been immunized they kind of freaked out and decided to get a urine and blood sample from her. To get the urine they taped a bag to her kitty and told me to go out and give her water and walk her till she peed. Plus we had to go to the lab and see if they could get blood from LB. She's old enough now that they take it from the arm, not the foot.
We went to the lab and the lady behind the counter was totally mrs. doom and gloom. She had to put a stop on everything, saying how everything we needed done probably couldn't be done and I'd probably have to go to the children's hospital (1 hour away) to get blood drawn from LB because the hospital had the EQUIPMENT to do it. Well, the nurse at the lab was awesome. Cheerful and positive. She said LB had a nice big vein and just had to get mrs. doom and gloom to hold LB's arm down while she drew the blood. LB was already crying from being scared and tired, because by this time it was WAY past her nap time. I was so impressed that she didn't scream or shriek or freak out and try to yank her arm away while they were drawing the blood. But she probably didn't realize what they were doing. They gave her a sticker afterwards, and normally she loves stickers. But she didn't want anything to do with the one they were offering her. Then I took her to the bathroom and checked her bag and it looked like there was pee in it.
So back to the clinic we went (all this time my mom has been sitting in the car with LG) and waited about 10 minutes to get into a room, the same room we were in before, so LB starts crying because she recognizes it. I got yet ANOTHER bitchy lady who checked her bag and told me there wasn't enough in there. So out we went again. I bought some water and a bagel and we went to the car to eat and drink. 45 minutes later there was still no pee and it was 2:30 p.m. My mom and LG couldn't just sit in the car all day, and the Dr had told me that there were other options for getting pee from LB. One was to go home with the bag and then drop it off at a lab close to home. The other option was a catheter. So I went back to the clinic with LB again and waited about 20 min to see the Dr. We decided she'd put a catheter in and use a syringe at the end of the tube to draw some pee out. If there was any in there. The catheter hadn't been painful for me when LG arrived, so I felt fine with her putting one in LB. Anything so that we could be done with the Dr stuff and get her home and not scared and crying anymore. So another Dr came in and pinned her legs open and down and the main Dr got some pee out. THEN we got to drive home.
LB flaked in the car right away and when we got home I laid down with her in her new big bed (which is another story) and...
She's doing a lot better now. We haven't had to give her infant tylenol since before the Dr visit. I understand the value of something that reduces the fever to help kids sleep better when they are ill, but I can't help wondering if by suppressing the fever it's also hampering the body from fighting whatever virus its trying to beat. Can't ask a Dr. To them tylenol and vaccinations are perfectly safe. It's IMPOSSIBLE to get a Dr to even acknowledge there might be anything not so great about giving a child these. I found it so bizarre when I was in the hospital and taking a mix of tylenol and advil every two hours and pumping and the nurse said it was perfectly safe for my premature baby. Maybe the amount he was getting was so small it wouldn't matter... but then HE was tiny, too.
Sometimes it's hard to keep a strong belief when everyone around me disagrees.
5 comments:
Well, I'm glad she's doing better.
how come she was never immunized?
I'm so glad she's feeling better.
ghost: I've read up on both sides of the issue and what made me more distrustful of it all was how doctors do not even acknowledge that there's any risk of anything bad happening to a child, other than a possible mild reaction. The more I thought about it the more I didn't feel safe having such a tiny baby injected like that. With LB, Tomek and I decided we'd wait till she was 2, and then take another look at starting her vaccinations.
phil & robynn: ME TOO. i have no experience with sick children and this has been a real eye opener for me. poor little boo boo.
I'm glad she's feeling better. Poor little thing. I am freaked out by immunizations too so I commend you for not taking the common path. I am not convinced that there is not a link between immunizations and autism in some kids.
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