Jump to content

Recommended Posts

For those of you who've had one child pass the chicken pox onto another, could you pls tell me how many days passed before the 2nd child turned spotty? Our toddler woke up with spots on Thursday and so far our newborn hasn't gotten it. Was wondering when i could start celebrating.


many thanks

k

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/30273-chicken-pox-and-siblings/
Share on other sites

My daughter had it whilst we also had a new born, my gp happened to get through to a top guy at Kings (randomly I suspect...) who said that a fully breastfed baby would have approx 6 months of immunity if the mother had had chicken pox. Not exact but a guideline I think.

Breast fed newborn not that likely to get it, though sometimes they get a very mild dose & you don't even know.


TBH it's kind of good to know its out the way - our 4 year old is yet to get it as far as I know, and having had to miss a plane thanks to older child's timing it is hanging over me like the sword of Damocles!!!

My twins were exposed to chicken pox at about 5 months whilst still breast fed. One did not get it, one got a very mild dose and I was told by the GP at the time that they would have benfitted from my immunity but as a result the one who had a very mild dose would not have built up her own immunity. Sure enough they both got it again at the age of about 4.

My 3 year old got it a few weeks ago - my 4 month old got spots pretty much exactly 2 weeks after the first spots appeared on my 3 year old. My baby is still breastfed but only 1 feed a day so not enough for immunity I guess.


I treated my baby as infectious for the last few weeks and avoided mixing him with other babies who hadn't had it as didn't want him to spread it. As it happens he has been relatively ok. Good luck

Sorry to hijack this thread but I have a question. My youngest (3 1/2) hasn't had it yet. So when she does have it what do I do about keeping her at home when I have to drop off and pick up my eldest from school (we have to go indoors and queue up outside his classroom door and then they let them out one by one)? I'm not going to be able to rely on friends to drop off and pick up every day for the whole of incubation??


Would love to hear how people get around this issue?


Thanks

My nephew broke put on spots on Boxing Day, then my daughter 2 weeks later, then the children I was looking after 2 weeks after that.........


Pebbles, I've cared for a child with the pox and had to do a pick up like that, I kept them in the buggy with the rain cover over them! You could always pick up 5mins early or deliberately late.

Pebbles, all the stuff I read said that if you're outdoors then you're ok - in other words your child is highly unlikely to infect another unless they are in physical contact or in the same room. So the solution of keeping the infectious child in the buggy should work fine if you don't have to go indoors to do the pickup or if you can leave them outside for a minute or two.


pebbles Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Sorry to hijack this thread but I have a question.

> My youngest (3 1/2) hasn't had it yet. So when

> she does have it what do I do about keeping her at

> home when I have to drop off and pick up my eldest

> from school (we have to go indoors and queue up

> outside his classroom door and then they let them

> out one by one)? I'm not going to be able to rely

> on friends to drop off and pick up every day for

> the whole of incubation??

>

> Would love to hear how people get around this

> issue?

>

> Thanks

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • The Toronto is boring amused me.  I was thinking of Philadelphia but when I reconsidered, Toronto seemed the obvious place.  But my research came to your conclusion that it is in deed dull. I've been to Vancouver twice but found that surprisingly sterile too.  I'll raise your Sydney with my San Fran and Wellington, both bay cities like Vancouver but I found far more cultural.  Although that is obvious with San Fran. I've probably got myself banned from the US with this thread and my views on Trump posted elsewhere. In your suggested tour what about the towns and cities where the National Guard has been called.  That would be fun. Kansas is apparently a great place but will be frighteningly hot I expect
    • Fifa are discussing expanding it to 64 teams for the 2030 tournament South America, which would mean 128 games. That's mad. They're aren't enough hours in the day to watch that much football and I'd have to move house to find a place with enough space for my 'Super Sun World Cup Wall Chart'. There are games in Mexico and Canada in 2026, so that's an option. Mexico will be unbearably hot, Toronto will be unbearably dull - Leonard Cohen once described it as 'New York run by the Swiss' and he was spot on  -  so I'd say Vancouver. Possibly the most beautiful setting for a city outside Sydney and a great food scene. Nick over the border and there are matches in Seattle as well. The Amtrak train down from Seattle to San Francisco, another WC venue, through Oregon is staggering - and they have an observation car with a bar! Portland and Eugene are worth a couple of nights as well. That part of northern California and the Pacific Northwest is the most un-Trumpy part of the US, so I wouldn't worry too much and Vancouver is surprisingly interesting, for Canada at least. You've actually made me think about making the trip again.  
    • Was chatting to my mates including Robert Jenrick in the Crompton Arms in Handsworth and this was an obvious one   Robert come and have a chat, I once lived in Handsworth, you twit The track has improved further with age
    • The difficulty with all the national shame is that you are handing the world to the right wing populist parties ("The flag, love it or leave it").  You can look at many if not most of Europe for the damage their colonial conquests did to much of the world. For Britain we could equally look at partition and the impact on the Indian subcontinent, 10 million plus death and the bonkers situation with India and Pakistan now.  Spain and Portugal went much further in wiping out much of the population of South America.  i understand that Stalin was 10 million plus.  We all know about the Third Reich, even then perhaps the allies could have done more. I am not questioning what you say, but sadly most are only concerned about the present and don't care about sins of the past. And back to my earlier comment that some will point out other 'conflicts' attracting much less interest. Not a reason not to march tomorrow     
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...