"I've Missed Two Appointments With...
Body & Soul1 min ago
Anyone else seen this?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/west_yorkshire/4284522.stm
We truly live in a bonkers age!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.the boys fine now, we've just tried him on his first solids and he's not sold on the idea. i agree cooings fine, but in the mood we were in when he was in the hospital, the worry about not being able to take your kid home, and the paranoia about infections can make you a bit humourless when you should really be the opposite, and some of the stories that my mums told me about scubu can make your hair curl. the managers statement about the cooing and the human rights side of it is generally the only thing that people will remember when they're using it as an excuse to bash the nhs in later months, or years.
That it sort of the problem isn't it goldenboy? I mean the managers statements. It seems ridiculous until you come to the last part of the article! The hospital should have worded it quite differently , as the reasons for why they're doing it is sensible. I mean, it seems quite bonkers that you can't say "helllooooo baby" in your most silly voice!
ps. I still think her statements are ridiculous but the idea probably isn't ridicolous and when I look at Pipers post I can't help laughing too.
pps. I'm happy to hear you boy is fine now goldenboy. Best wishes x
i can understand when it comes to scbu units as my son spent 2 months there, and no kids or non-family were allowed in anyway.
But with normal wards i think thats madness as long as the visitors are told to wash their hands.
The only time i found cooing annoying was when callum came out of hospital he only weighed 4lb and we couldnt go anywhere, as soon as someone spotted us people went crazy cos he was so tiny! (one lady told my mum i was too old to carry a dolly!)
i couldn't believe it when I saw this, but if in actuality the hospital nursery wards are so unprotected that strangers can cough on and stroke the babies, well, then so be it!
sorry to be fiddly, but in the USA, all babies in the nursery are housed behind a thick glass so people can see the babies and coo til their hearts content but they can't get close enough to touch them! that just seems dangerous! not just in regards to infection but kidnapping!
New-born babies and their mothers deserve a bit of respect and peace and quiet, just like everyone else, young and old, whether in hospital, or outside.
Why - as Linda Riordan and Pej respectively suggest - should mothers and new-born babies have to fight for these rights? Give them a break! One's just given birth, and the other's just been born.
The onus is on visitors to be sensitive to patients' rights and to respect them. It sounds to me as though they weren't and they didn't and that's resulted in the admittedly over-the-top ban.
I agree with the neo-natal manager; prodding babies like tins in a supermarket shouldn't happen and babies should indeed be recognised as people with the same rights as you or me.
That, I think, should have been the focus of the article. The truly bonkers aspect of this story is that instead, our public service broadcaster has yet again resorted to sensationalist journalism.
We rarely seem to get straight news reports any more. It all seems to have to conform to a sensationalist formula - e.g. "The French are a bunch of smelly, lazy, arrogant f*ckwits; (pause for dramatic effect) That's the finding of [an unimaginably insignificant survey].
In the 80s, we used to find out who a quote was from beforehand, e.g. "The Foreign Office has issued advice not to travel to Ulan Bator". Now, it's more like "DON'T GO TO ULAN BATOR; that's the advice issued by the Foreign Office".
I blame Huw Ed-wards. I'm sure he started that irritating trend.