T
Terry
Guest
I was reading the flu shot topic, and I saw on there that some of you said your doctors advised you to keep away from people who had been given the Flu Mist.
Here's the thing, Marissa's school has given the Flu Mist to every child who's able to get it for free for the past two years, during school hours.
The first year they were going to do it I called the nurse to see whether or not Marissa should stay home that day. I felt that squirting a live virus up the kids noses might make them sneeze and put the virus all over the school.
I was assured that although she could not receive the vaccine, being around the children that had received it was okay.
She got sick the week the vaccine was given, both years now. Not in the hospital sick, but 2 weeks worth of cold symptoms sick, mainly a bad head cold with very hard coughing. I have observed both years that most of the kids have this after the flu mist, it is just that Marissa stays sick longer than them.
I brought this up with my husband, and we were considering asking the school if since this is a free service being offered, if there was anyway to maybe give it on a week night or weekend where Marissa and others like her will be able to avoid it. Maybe do it outside so it doesn't get distributed in the school.
But now I don't know what to think if she could still be exposed to it days or weeks after someone gets it. She can't miss all that school time when she is not sick. I don't think I am wrong that it has made her ill for the past two years. She was fine both times the week before the vaccination, and sick within two days after it.
Any suggestions? Do any of your schools have this program? How do you handle keeping your child away from it? Do you think it is tacky to ask that they at least give the vaccines outside? Currently they give them right in the health room, which Marissa frequents several times a day.
Thanks for bearing yet one more of my freak out moments!
Terry
Here's the thing, Marissa's school has given the Flu Mist to every child who's able to get it for free for the past two years, during school hours.
The first year they were going to do it I called the nurse to see whether or not Marissa should stay home that day. I felt that squirting a live virus up the kids noses might make them sneeze and put the virus all over the school.
I was assured that although she could not receive the vaccine, being around the children that had received it was okay.
She got sick the week the vaccine was given, both years now. Not in the hospital sick, but 2 weeks worth of cold symptoms sick, mainly a bad head cold with very hard coughing. I have observed both years that most of the kids have this after the flu mist, it is just that Marissa stays sick longer than them.
I brought this up with my husband, and we were considering asking the school if since this is a free service being offered, if there was anyway to maybe give it on a week night or weekend where Marissa and others like her will be able to avoid it. Maybe do it outside so it doesn't get distributed in the school.
But now I don't know what to think if she could still be exposed to it days or weeks after someone gets it. She can't miss all that school time when she is not sick. I don't think I am wrong that it has made her ill for the past two years. She was fine both times the week before the vaccination, and sick within two days after it.
Any suggestions? Do any of your schools have this program? How do you handle keeping your child away from it? Do you think it is tacky to ask that they at least give the vaccines outside? Currently they give them right in the health room, which Marissa frequents several times a day.
Thanks for bearing yet one more of my freak out moments!
Terry