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#1
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First, Do No Harm.
last wednesday, i left straight from work to a poker tournament my wife and i play at each week. about an hour into it, my mom, who is babysitting, calls and tells me my youngest daughter(just turned 1) has not stopped screaming since she woke up from a nap just after my wife had left.
so, since my wife had about twice the chip stack i had(dumb luck), i volunteered to go home to see if i could get her calmed down. when i got there, she was still crying, and just wouldn't stop. mom had mentioned she had tugged at her ear a couple times, but there was no fever. and for the previous 2-3 days, my other 3 daughters had passed around an upset stomach that resulted in a bit of vomitting. not knowing which was bothering the youngster, i called her doctor at home. he said to take her to the "fast track" at the hospital emergency room. if she had an ear infection, he wanted the antibiotics started immediately. so, off i go. we get registered in and all, and by that time, the wee one calmed down considerably, and seemed OK. the nurse proceeded to get all the necessaries...blood pressure, heart rate, etc...which made my daughter cry some more. "next", says the nurse, "we need to get her temperature with an anal thermometer." i asked why it was necessary, and she told me that it was more accurate than other means of getting a child's temperature. "thanks, but no thanks" i said. we'll wait until morning to go to her doctor. he's never shoved anything up her ass. so, i left right then. now, it may very well be more accurate to get a temp that way, but is 1/2 a degree off accurate going to change any doctor's diagnosis? when my triplets were born, they were in intensive care for the first 10 days of their lives, and no doctor ever stuck a foreign object in their butts. they had constant temperature monitoring by something they stuck on their foreheads. they also taught me to take their temperature at home using a thermometer under the arm. there is also a device that takes a temperature immediately from the inner ear. any of these could have been used with very little discomfort, not to mention it was quite obvious by touching her forehead that she did not have a fever. all i wanted to know is did she have an ear infection. i couldn't see how inserting something in the poor girl's ass had any bearing on that. was i wrong for leaving, or did i do right by protecting her? <font color="white">BTW, she did not have an ear infection, nor did she have an upset stomach. she had a pebble/small rock in her shoe. </font> cheers! |
#2
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Re: First, Do No Harm.
I don't really see what you were protecting her from unless you think the nurse was going to be getting off on putting the thermometer up her ass. That being said it does seem a bit strange.
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#3
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Re: First, Do No Harm.
Are you serious? Not exactly responsible parenting.
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#4
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Re: First, Do No Harm.
i've been through ear infections before, and was almost certain this was not one. kids pull their ears for lots of reasons, and when there is an infection, there is almost always a fever.
cheers! |
#5
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Re: First, Do No Harm.
[ QUOTE ]
i've been through ear infections before, and was almost certain this was not one. kids pull their ears for lots of reasons, and when there is an infection, there is almost always a fever. cheers! [/ QUOTE ] Not at all true. Some people have chronic sinus infections for years, for instance, without fevers. Sometimes they don't even realize it. A friend of mine had that, bad enough that eventually she had to go through all kinds of surgeries. A sinus sounds as good as an ear to me. Besides, haven't you ever had an infected toe or something? I've had some pretty fierce infections without running a temperature. |
#6
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Re: First, Do No Harm.
[ QUOTE ]
Are you serious? Not exactly responsible parenting. [/ QUOTE ] |
#7
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Re: First, Do No Harm.
Taking a child's temperature by rectal thermometer is not uncommon.
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#8
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Re: First, Do No Harm.
[ QUOTE ]
Taking a child's temperature by rectal thermometer is not uncommon. [/ QUOTE ] i am aware of this, i just don't understand why it is. if an ear thermometr is good enough for a family doctor, why isn't it for a hospital? if a stick on probe thingy is good enough for a newborn intensive care unit, why isn't it good enough for a non-emergency section of an emergency room? cheers! |
#9
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Re: First, Do No Harm.
perhaps different hospitals/centers have different protocols (insurance, legislation, patient care issues).... and protocols may change with continued, updated information.
I don't know for sure... but these are possibilities. |
#10
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Re: First, Do No Harm.
[ QUOTE ]
if an ear thermometr is good enough for a family doctor, why isn't it for a hospital? [/ QUOTE ] Now, I haven't had an ear thermometer used on me for many years, if ever, so forgive me if I'm wrong, but would a family doctor use an ear thermometer on someone that they suspected had an ear infection? Wouldn't that just cause more damage and discomfort if there was an ear-related problem? |
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