How much public activity do you limit with your newborn with CF

Emily65Roses

New member
I'm not a parent, but I thought I'd speak up. I had no limits as a child (that aren't usual for any child, that is). I had sleepovers, I went to nursery school, kindergarten, and public schools. I played in the dirt. I swam in pools. I went to parties. I took extracurricular art classes. I visited with family, I went with my mom to the grocery store, mall, or whatever else.

If you want to be more careful about being clean, that's fine. But in my personal opinion, restricting too much is going overboard. Mind you, "too much" is a very subjective term. To me, keeping relatives away, keeping them at home for fear of germs, restricting a child's social activities (once they're old enough), etc is my "too much."

There are people who will disagree with me, especially a lot of parents. But having CF myself, I can be of some help. Yes, you'll want parenting tips from other parents with CFers. But if you want your child to live a happy life, you'll also want advice from the actual adult CFers (parent or not) that are floating around, myself included. I can honestly say I'm glad my parents didn't keep me from doing "normal" things. If I died tomorrow (I'm 23), I'd be happy that I got to do "normal" stuff up until then. And if it helps any, I more than likely will not be dying tomorrow. I'm still in d*mn good shape, if I do say so myself. 70% lung function.

In short, you need to <u>find a balance</u> that works for your family and your child (and that may change as the child gets older and starts to make decisions for himself). You need to take care of the CF, make sure meds and therapies get done... but you also need to allow the child to <b>be</b> a child and have a life.

This isn't any assumption on you, but I feel the need to say it for general pondering purposes... What good is a CF life that lasts 5 extra years, if his/her life is spent worrying too much, avoiding everything for fear of germs, missing out on fun, etc...?

Finding a good balance is important. Not too much sheltering, and not too much ignoring responsibilities concerning health. Happy medium. <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">

Oh, and okok has it right. EVERYONE needs to develop a healthy immune system, CFers included. I had chicken pox when I was little, I've had the flu a few times, I've had ear infections, and sinus infections, I get a cold at least once a year. My mom never bothered to keep me away from "sick" people or anything. She didn't rub my face in used tissues or anything, but she let me be around the same thing that my sister (no CF) was around.
 

okok

New member
lol emily...i guess i did make it sound like i rubbed dd's face in tissues. of course i don't. yuck! but i don't really try to limit her exposure to most germs. just the really yucky stuff like the toilet, the cat box, raw meat, etc.
 

okok

New member
lol emily...i guess i did make it sound like i rubbed dd's face in tissues. of course i don't. yuck! but i don't really try to limit her exposure to most germs. just the really yucky stuff like the toilet, the cat box, raw meat, etc.
 

okok

New member
lol emily...i guess i did make it sound like i rubbed dd's face in tissues. of course i don't. yuck! but i don't really try to limit her exposure to most germs. just the really yucky stuff like the toilet, the cat box, raw meat, etc.
 

ktsmom

New member
I'm going to add that with relatives, you generally KNOW before being with them that they are germy. The person in line next to you at Wal-Mart could have a fungus ball in their lung or maybe just got released from a nursing home but you wouldn't necessarilly know it. We DID know these things and thats why we restricted (in our minds, rightfully so) some holiday visits with family. So relatives get a bad rap on here sometimes but its just because we know certain things about them.

Otherwise, carry on, as Emily's great post lines it out! <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">
 

ktsmom

New member
I'm going to add that with relatives, you generally KNOW before being with them that they are germy. The person in line next to you at Wal-Mart could have a fungus ball in their lung or maybe just got released from a nursing home but you wouldn't necessarilly know it. We DID know these things and thats why we restricted (in our minds, rightfully so) some holiday visits with family. So relatives get a bad rap on here sometimes but its just because we know certain things about them.

Otherwise, carry on, as Emily's great post lines it out! <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">
 

ktsmom

New member
I'm going to add that with relatives, you generally KNOW before being with them that they are germy. The person in line next to you at Wal-Mart could have a fungus ball in their lung or maybe just got released from a nursing home but you wouldn't necessarilly know it. We DID know these things and thats why we restricted (in our minds, rightfully so) some holiday visits with family. So relatives get a bad rap on here sometimes but its just because we know certain things about them.

Otherwise, carry on, as Emily's great post lines it out! <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">
 

wiltonnh

New member
Thanks for everyone's input - I have to agree that germ watch needs to be kept to a minimum for my children's enjoyment as well as my own sanity.

I am also looking on opinions for pancreatic enzymes that are available on the market. I know that each child is different so some may work for your child while others don't seem to. Is there was a general consensus of which enzymes are better or are they even across the board.
 

wiltonnh

New member
Thanks for everyone's input - I have to agree that germ watch needs to be kept to a minimum for my children's enjoyment as well as my own sanity.

I am also looking on opinions for pancreatic enzymes that are available on the market. I know that each child is different so some may work for your child while others don't seem to. Is there was a general consensus of which enzymes are better or are they even across the board.
 

wiltonnh

New member
Thanks for everyone's input - I have to agree that germ watch needs to be kept to a minimum for my children's enjoyment as well as my own sanity.

I am also looking on opinions for pancreatic enzymes that are available on the market. I know that each child is different so some may work for your child while others don't seem to. Is there was a general consensus of which enzymes are better or are they even across the board.
 

Ratatosk

Administrator
Staff member
We've used pancreacarb and pancrease mt4s. DS takes 5 of the latter with meals and 2-3 with snacks. When he was a newborn we probably weren't giving him enough 'cuz his stools weren't as well formed as they should've been and he'd poop mid diaper change.

BTW, germ story here. Last weekend, I took DS to Target and I realized I didn't have any wipes on me. I usually carry some along -- wipe off the cart and then his hands when we get back to the car. I'd left them in the car. So I said, please don't stick your fingers in your mouth (after they go up his nose) until we get back to the car to wash them off. I turned around and he was LICKING !!! his hands off. Bleah! At least it wasn't as bad as the ABC gum he found on the playground last summer. Toddlers... <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">
 

Ratatosk

Administrator
Staff member
We've used pancreacarb and pancrease mt4s. DS takes 5 of the latter with meals and 2-3 with snacks. When he was a newborn we probably weren't giving him enough 'cuz his stools weren't as well formed as they should've been and he'd poop mid diaper change.

BTW, germ story here. Last weekend, I took DS to Target and I realized I didn't have any wipes on me. I usually carry some along -- wipe off the cart and then his hands when we get back to the car. I'd left them in the car. So I said, please don't stick your fingers in your mouth (after they go up his nose) until we get back to the car to wash them off. I turned around and he was LICKING !!! his hands off. Bleah! At least it wasn't as bad as the ABC gum he found on the playground last summer. Toddlers... <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">
 

Ratatosk

Administrator
Staff member
We've used pancreacarb and pancrease mt4s. DS takes 5 of the latter with meals and 2-3 with snacks. When he was a newborn we probably weren't giving him enough 'cuz his stools weren't as well formed as they should've been and he'd poop mid diaper change.

BTW, germ story here. Last weekend, I took DS to Target and I realized I didn't have any wipes on me. I usually carry some along -- wipe off the cart and then his hands when we get back to the car. I'd left them in the car. So I said, please don't stick your fingers in your mouth (after they go up his nose) until we get back to the car to wash them off. I turned around and he was LICKING !!! his hands off. Bleah! At least it wasn't as bad as the ABC gum he found on the playground last summer. Toddlers... <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">
 

ktsmom

New member
We were started on Creon and they seem to work (according to her BM's) so we have not tried any others. I think I read that some are better at helping to digest carbs and some are better at helping to digest fats. Also there was a thread about this where Risa (EnergyGal) posted about vegetable enzymes:

<a target=_blank class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://forums.cysticfibrosis.com/messageview.cfm?catid=5&threadid=16028&highlight_key=y&keyword1=vegetable%20enzymes
">http://forums.cysticfibrosis.c...1=vegetable%20enzymes
</a>

Hope this thread works.
 

ktsmom

New member
We were started on Creon and they seem to work (according to her BM's) so we have not tried any others. I think I read that some are better at helping to digest carbs and some are better at helping to digest fats. Also there was a thread about this where Risa (EnergyGal) posted about vegetable enzymes:

<a target=_blank class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://forums.cysticfibrosis.com/messageview.cfm?catid=5&threadid=16028&highlight_key=y&keyword1=vegetable%20enzymes
">http://forums.cysticfibrosis.c...1=vegetable%20enzymes
</a>

Hope this thread works.
 

ktsmom

New member
We were started on Creon and they seem to work (according to her BM's) so we have not tried any others. I think I read that some are better at helping to digest carbs and some are better at helping to digest fats. Also there was a thread about this where Risa (EnergyGal) posted about vegetable enzymes:

<a target=_blank class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://forums.cysticfibrosis.com/messageview.cfm?catid=5&threadid=16028&highlight_key=y&keyword1=vegetable%20enzymes
">http://forums.cysticfibrosis.c...1=vegetable%20enzymes
</a>

Hope this thread works.
 

wiltonnh

New member
Thanks again for the info-I have a feeling that my newborn is not doing well on Ultrase-although he is doing well with weight gain he seems so uncomfortable during bowel movements-which still contain some mucus. Is it possible to have normal stools if you find right enzyme balance or is there always a touch of mucus, etc in movements.

This site is dangerous I keep walking by computer and stopping to check in-my chores are way behind today. Who wants to do laundry anyways-for me it is the worse house chore going.
 
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