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- Path: sparky!uunet!enterpoop.mit.edu!spool.mu.edu!agate!darkstar.UCSC.EDU!larrabee
- From: larrabee@cse.ucsc.edu (Tracy Larrabee)
- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Subject: Re: nipple confusion and feeding newborn glucose-water???
- Date: 27 Jan 1993 00:40:46 GMT
- Organization: University of California, Santa Cruz (CE/CIS Boards)
- Lines: 56
- Message-ID: <1k4lmeINNa16@darkstar.UCSC.EDU>
- References: <1993Jan25.193105.19919@afit.af.mil> <1993Jan26.135125.29944@nynexst.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: arapaho.ucsc.edu
-
- In article <1993Jan26.135125.29944@nynexst.com> clare@nynexst.com (Clare Chu) writes:
- > But how can you? You are not allowed in the nursery. The nurseries
- > are locked up. You can only look through the window and see them
- > washing your baby. We did have rooming-in, but they still take
- > the baby away for washing, paper-clothes changing, and probably
- > glucose water. During visiting hours, all babies are wisked back
- > to the nursery for security reasons. And during one of those visiting
- > hours I saw a nurse give my son a pacifier but couldn't do a thing
- > about it. He loved it, and still loves his pacifier today!
-
- My hospital was quite different. I spent a week *in* the nursery with
- my son. And the babies that could go out of the nursery did not have
- to be broght back for washing or paper-clothes changing. There
- basically were no visiting hours--it was up to the parents to police
- that. They did ask that if no one was awake and in the room (like dad
- was gone and mom was showering) that you take the baby back to the
- nursery (so the child was never unsupervised by an awake person).
- They also asked that you not give your child to anyone who didn't have
- the proper photo-ID. The carts that the babies were delivered to
- their parents in were stocked with diapers, thermometers, cloths,
- combs, suction-bulbs, and a change of blankets. The parents could do
- as much of the care as they were comfortable with.
-
- In the nursery the nurses I saw payed strict attention to the
- instructions they were given. They never gave bottles to babies that
- had "breast-feeding only" notations on their charts. I did see them
- agonize over upset babies that had "no bottle" notations on their
- charts and instructions from mom to not bring the kid to her room for
- a certain amount of time, but they just were upset for the little
- squirmers; they didn't break the rules. In fact, I found the nurses
- in the nursery to be wonderful, empathetic, very helpful people. I
- enjoyed talking to them and I learned a lot. They all had children,
- they all breastfed, and they were all very loving of the babies they
- had charge of. I think I was much more relaxed when I got home
- because I learned so much from the nurses during the week that I spent
- in the nursery. They encouraged me to do all of his care that I could
- (I don't insert IVs or take blood samples or set up jaundice lights or
- do gavage feedings). There were two nurses who had had premies (now
- healthy children) with more problems than mine had, and their
- reassuring comments were priceless to me. I felt like I was in charge
- of my child and that my help was vital. I'm really glad they did that
- for me. I would hate to have been at the hospital that Clare
- describes.
-
- (Actually, I heard all sorts of interesting things in there. They
- would forget I was an outsider sometimes and talk about how some woman
- was more likely to get a C-section if she didn't deliver by
- such-and-such a time because of the doctor who would be on call
- starting at that time. I ended up feeling like I should get my
- recommendations on good OB care from the nursery nurses. If you can
- get them to let their hair down, they can tell you pretty amazing
- stories.)
-
- --
- Tracy Larrabee larrabee@cse.ucsc.edu
-
-