Just curious if any one else has had a child that will vomit, right before he's about to break a tooth through. Years back, i had a little girl that did this, not with every tooth, but with some she would vomit out of nowhere and then be fine, and then we would notice a tooth break through not long after. Now, i have a little boy that vomited on sunday, was good for me all week, then last night the minute they walked through the door at his house after being picked up, he vomited and was fine after that. We think he's trying to break through a molar, has anybody else had this?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Vomiting Because Of Teething
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by scorp122 View PostJust curious if any one else has had a child that will vomit, right before he's about to break a tooth through. Years back, i had a little girl that did this, not with every tooth, but with some she would vomit out of nowhere and then be fine, and then we would notice a tooth break through not long after. Now, i have a little boy that vomited on sunday, was good for me all week, then last night the minute they walked through the door at his house after being picked up, he vomited and was fine after that. We think he's trying to break through a molar, has anybody else had this?
However, like Kabob I exclude for symptoms not causes so if they vomit here, they are excluded from care for either 24 or 48 hours depending.
My illness policy also lists "teething" as something I exclude for so I don't get that excuse much.
Interesting connection though between teething and vomiting. I've just never had a kid that did that.
- Flag
Comment
-
Originally posted by Kabob View PostNope. I exclude for symptoms. If they vomited the night before, I wouldn't let them come to daycare as per policy. Teething and allergies tend to be contagious.
I let parents know this at interviews, telling them this exact scenario. That while they *think* it might be teething, that I will exclude for the symptom nonetheless.
And no, I've never had that with a child.
- Flag
Comment
-
I also had parents argue that I shouldn't exclude for fever if it is caused by an ear infection because that isn't contagious. I told them that attitude is contagious as a crabby child makes for a crabby group. Also, fever is not something to mess around with as I don't give meds here and a spike in fever can easily lead to complications like seizures in young children which equals an ambulance bill for the parents. The parents quit arguing after I mentioned ambulance bill.
So, I learned to say "I exclude for symptoms." Makes it so much easier.
- Flag
Comment
Comment