Jump to content

Recommended Posts

My son has started to really hate medicine after a week of cal pol and cough syrup,


I now have to add antibiotics which is bad enough but..... EYE DROPS!


How on earth do I do it?


He is very strong and also flexible s can get out of my husbands grip fairly quickly.


Any tips?


Ps anyone worried about the week of cal pol, it's all on docs orders.

Never had to give eyedrops to my toddler, but I have had to give them to my cat!


Make sure the drops are at body temperature. A cold drop in the eye can be really unpleasant. I put Kitty's eyedrops in my bra (pocket would also work, but don't sit on them!) for a few minutes before dosing her. Then Hubbie and I double-teamed her to get it over quickly, with one of us holding her snuggly and the other giving the drops. Then lots of treats and cuddles. I would do the same if it were my child.


Have you tried the drops on yourself? If they really sting your eyes, they will sting your LO's eyes too. Ask for a different formulation if that's the case, but hopefully they've taken that into account for paediatric drops.


No one in our house has been well since mid-October. As soon as someone is well, someone else is sick (including the pets). Lots of sympathy to you. xx

My toddler had a nasty reoccuring eye infection around 1 year old and you have my sympathies. The way we managed to do it was to make a fun game out of it, there was no pinning her down as we quickly realised she hated that. Instead I had to have a go, as did her dad, the dolly had a drop and then we got very excited and made lots of whoooing noises as she had a drop. Often it didn't really go in but my mother in law (a GP) said that as long as some got in it would do some good. We let her feel that she had control so she would hold the drops a lot, look at them closely etc so it wasn't a scary thing that she didn't understand. We tried not to sneak up on her with it.


Also keep wiping with slightly salted boiled water and cotton wool, that can provide some relief if their eyes are itchy and gloopy.


Good luck!

jennyh Wrote:

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

> My toddler had a nasty reoccuring eye infection

> around 1 year old and you have my sympathies. The

> way we managed to do it was to make a fun game out

> of it, there was no pinning her down as we quickly

> realised she hated that.


Ugh, no, being pinned down sounds awful (even my cat would hate that!).


> Instead I had to have a

> go, as did her dad, the dolly had a drop and then

> we got very excited and made lots of whoooing

> noises as she had a drop. Often it didn't really

> go in but my mother in law (a GP) said that as

> long as some got in it would do some good.


Funny enough, our vet said the same thing about Kitty's eyedrops.


>

> Also keep wiping with slightly salted boiled water

> and cotton wool, that can provide some relief if

> their eyes are itchy and gloopy.

>


Sainsbury's sells a soft rubbery type of baby sponge that my daughter loves to rub her eyes with in the bath. I tried it, and it's lovely. A really soothing texture... I'll try to look up which one it is.


And also just to say, for anyone who's still b/fing, I've heard that you can use breastmilk in the eyes because of its high antibody content (though I never tried this myself -- would love to know if it really works).

My brother is an optician and he recommends for babies and toddlers that you put the drop in the corner of their eye, even if their eye is closed because the liquid will seep in gently and not cause stress to the child. It works, one of mine had rotten conjunctivitis and it worked a treat. Hope this helps

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

    • If you want a small prickly evergreen for shade I would recommend Ruscus aculeatus. Unlike Pyracantha, which grows big and is unpleasant to prune, Ruscus only grows to a metre and it will grow in very dark dry shade where almost nothing else does. It is viciously spiny and has very good  red berries in winter.  Berberis darwinii and Berberis julianae are two good evergreen Berberis that will grow in partial shade. I usually order from Burncoose but I have always had a good service from Crocus. 
    • Week 31 fixtures...   Saturday 26th April Chelsea v Everton Brighton & Hove Albion v West Ham United Newcastle United v Ipswich Town Southampton v Fulham Wolverhampton Wanderers v Leicester City   Sunday 27th April AFC Bournemouth v Manchester United Liverpool v Tottenham Hotspur   Thursday 1st May Nottingham Forest v Brentford
    • Have you found your cat. The new cat in our garden looks very much like yours.  
    • I first subscribed to Tortoise two or three years ago, and also subscribe to the Guardian, and eg Byline and various others - I do feel it is important to support good media if you can. Tortoise have done some interesting stuff, tried to really reach out to readership and have been quite trailblazing on topical podcasts too. Having said that, I still can't quite see how it all fits with the Observer and I worry it will make both worse as they have different bases and dynamics in my view. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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