Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hello,


Its been a bad winter have had to miss alot of work due to child being ill and nursery will not accept him. I am looking into emergency childcare, is anyone using one of these and can they reommend them? How good are they and do you really get somone on the day? How much do they cost and is it worth it.


Another consideration is if my son will feel comfortable with a strange when ill. I have no family around so no other option really.

Hello,

We've got the same issue and are using Tinies, a nanny agency.

We're lucky that work is willing to pay for emergency child care though because they are not cheap.

They have an agency in SE London so all the nannies are local.

They're all experienced, CRB checked etc.

They come to our home and you may want to work from home as it can be tricky to leave your sick child alone with a stranger.

We've done it though, get the nanny in, hand over baby with some written instructions and run to work!

They're very reliable and I highly recommend them.

They request 2 hours notice only

Www.tinies.com

Second vote for tinies. I have used them a couple of times and they're great! It is quite expensive and fortunately my work paid for the service.


A cheaper option is sitters.com. They also have nannies who are local.


Either way, I agree it's better to work from home when you use the emergency nanny (with a sick child), particularly if it's the first time you're using that nanny.


Best wishes,

BC

Hi Reneet


I have just launched an exciting new business called Treehouse Work and Play. Treehouse is located on Brixton Road (opposite Mothercare) and offers home-working parents desk space rental whilst their children are being cared for in our onsite cr?che. So your little one will be very close to you but you can still work.


We also offer short stay PAYG childcare for parents needing emergency respite to get jobs done, go shopping, meet a friend for lunch etc


What illness is your son suffering with? If it is something that cannot be passed onto other children we can help. Having his mummy next door whilst his being cared for will definately make him feel more comfortable and put your mind at ease.


Our prices are very competitive when compared to nurseries and childminders.


Check out our website www.treehouseworkandplay.com


Grace

Email [email protected] or give us a call on 020 7998 3789

Hiya iv just seen this and you may not have seen my previous posts on here I am a mum of one and I'm currently working as a back up nanny the way this works is a few families have my number and if the nanny goes sick or the children are un able to go to nursery then they can call me short notice and that's it child care covered , I worked as a nanny before having my little boy and have experience with 3 children at one time all under 4 , my little boy is 10 months old and very friendly . If you would like to meet up we can arrange that and then you can just keep my nu,bet and call if ever needed its as simple as that :)


Thanks Hollie

I've used Tinies through the work + Family website:

http://www.myfamilycare.co.uk/


My company has a scheme with them and that's how we get the service at work.

Tinies is registered on the website along with other nannies, childminders, nurseries etc.

when booking a nanny through this website, they charge ?18 per hour.

However this includes a commission, and I expect Tinies charges less than that if you book directly through them.

If I had to pay for it, I would probably look for a cheaper option though...

Same process as Ipe - get the service through work. The corporate rates are much higher than the individual ones.


From what I remember when I asked them about direct hire, they charge a booking fee of ?25 per booking and you pay the nanny ?8ph, so looks like the nanny cost is the same as Sitters but the booking fee is what pushes the cost up.


I tend to use Sitters if paying directly and use Tinies when using company-sponsored childcare allowance.

Checked the tinies rates and it seems that they use the emergencychildcare.co.uk rates which i thought were quite high. Its 16-18pounds if you pay them directly plus VAT. If you want to pay the nanny durectly then its ?10ph for the nanny plus tax and 4ph to the agency plua VAT. And I think to qualify for their services you have to pay them ?9 per month.


Grace it snot a particular illness, its various illnesses that usually gets him not accepted at nursery, from high temperature to vommitting and things.

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

    • Perhaps like Malumbu they compost their food waste?
    • Obviously, but they may be wrong. Not only are we coming up to another population renewal drop after the continuing effects of the baby bulge generation enter a trough,  - secondary schools are closing across many boroughs - but birth rates in the UK continue to fall (not just absolute births which are also falling as a function of the bulge unwind, but births per head). And foreign student numbers are also falling. Additionally the costs of being a student are rising, which encourages more students to go to universities close enough that they don't need accommodation but can live at home. Bubbles burst, and this may be one of them.
    • Exactly. There's also a much easier way to find out how demand and supply are interacting for student housing: look at how goddamn expensive it is! It's a huge barrier to entry for students who want to study away from home. If the price of student housing cratered, this would be great news for everyone except property developers because it would cut housing costs for students and reduce some demand on "mainstream" housing in the wider market (because students won't be looking for houseshares). These property developers (and their financiers) aren't shovelling millions of pounds into student housing because they think the market is going to crash and they're going to lose money! And if they do, it's not really my problem...
    • Just a quick question- We’re on Crystal Palace Road, backing onto Darrell Road, about midway between The Great Exhibition and The Actress, and both my daughters (late teens/early twenties) are complaining about an intermittent, very high frequency noise that they find very uncomfortable. It’s worse for the older one as she’s trying to study for the finals of her degree coming up in May, and she’s already having hospital treatment for an ear condition. The sound can even be heard from indoors with the windows closed. Neither my wife or I can hear it but it’s been going on for a few days now and I wonder if it’s one of those ultrasonic cat/dog/fox repellents, maybe connected to a movement sensor, that only registers with animals and younger people with much more sensitive hearing?    If that is the case would you mind turning it off please as it’s causing a very real problem.    Many thanks.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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