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Sdcp16 07:57 AM 07-08-2011
I have been doing daycare now for over 12 yrs and have absolutely no backbone! We live in a very small town and there are 3 home daycare providers, all of us seeming to have similiar contracts/policies. I have a great contract and handbook but so many families don't seem to uphold the rules and I seem to have an issue confronting them on it! How do you all handle sick kids?? I seem to often have parents come in my door at 7:30 am and inform me that their child had a fever last night or threw up but they think it was just a fluke thing, etc. I get so frustrated that these adults don't seem to think there's a problem with this behavior but also frustrated at myself that I can't be more forceful! Any ideas? Suggestions???
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Cat Herder 08:27 AM 07-08-2011
Originally Posted by Sdcp16:
I have been doing daycare now for over 12 yrs and have absolutely no backbone!

but also frustrated at myself that I can't be more forceful! Any ideas? Suggestions???
You already know the answer.

Good luck, hun.

Wish there was an easy button answer, there just is not.
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Blackcat31 08:49 AM 07-08-2011
Originally Posted by Catherder:
You already know the answer.

Good luck, hun.

Wish there was an easy button answer, there just is not.
Well, the answer is easy (backbone). It is the implementing that is hard.
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Cat Herder 08:54 AM 07-08-2011
Originally Posted by Blackcat31:
Well, the answer is easy (backbone). It is the implementing that is hard.
It does get a bit easier each and every time someone tells you their wants and more important than your family's/group's needs, though....doesn't it?
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Blackcat31 08:57 AM 07-08-2011
Originally Posted by Catherder:
It does get a bit easier each and every time someone tells you their wants and more important than your family's/group's needs, though....doesn't it?
Most defintately!! Not enough credit is given to experience. I suppose it falls under the use it or lose it category huh? LOL!! Much like working out at the gym...the more you do it, the healthier you will be and the easier it becomes...
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Sdcp16 09:02 AM 07-08-2011
LOL, yes I do know the answer.....you'd think after 12 plus years,I'd be able to speak my mind and have a bit of a backbone! And I know that since they know they can get away with things, they continue to do them! Like not paying on time! Ugh!! The worst part of the sick kid thing is my 12 year old now has mono! We're going on two weeks now! Thankfully, for the most part now, my own kids don't catch the daycare kids illnesses since my kids are 12 and almost 15.
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wdmmom 09:12 AM 07-08-2011
Throwing up isn't a fluke, running a temp isn't a fluke.

It's quite simple. I decided a long time ago that if someone has something that could potentially get me or my children sick, they can't come. If they are whining a lot and it's apparent that they don't feel good, they can't come. If a child can't participate unassisted in any and all activities, they can't come. No puking, no temp, no contagious illness!

And, rather than having parents take their child to the doctor and get a note saying the child can resume daycare, I implemented this:

If your child visits a doctor. A note stating your child's illness is required to return to daycare. It will then be at the discretion of the provider to determine when your child may return to daycare.
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DBug 09:16 AM 07-08-2011
I hate confrontation, and have very little backbone. Luckily I've got great parents who usually respect my policies. But for me, if I notice parents are starting to take something for granted (like not paying on time), I reset everything by giving them all a letter reminding them about the policy and how I will be enforcing it. And for some reason, I find it easier to actually follow through with enforcing it. I guess it's because I want to be a woman of my word and I want people to be able to trust what I say. So if I reiterate that I'm going to be charging late fees for late pick-ups, I am more motivated to do it. Weird, but it works!
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Cat Herder 09:20 AM 07-08-2011
Oh, and I forgot to mention I added a motivator in my policies a while back.

If they are sick at home/enroute here the parents have to keep them out 24 hours after resolution of symptoms.

If I send them home or decline them at the door they have to stay out a minimum of 48 hours.

AKA "Doorstep Manipulation" penalty.

I RARELY ever have this issue any more.
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Blackcat31 09:29 AM 07-08-2011
Originally Posted by Catherder:
Oh, and I forgot to mention I added a motivator in my policies a while back.

If they are sick at home/enroute here the parents have to keep them out 24 hours after resolution of symptoms.

If I send them home or decline them at the door they have to stay out a minimum of 48 hours.

AKA "Doorstep Manipulation" penalty.

I RARELY ever have this issue any more.
Ooooo....I have to pipe in here and say that Cat's added addendum REALLY REALLY works!!! Since adding that little clause, NONE, (seriously, NOT one) of my dcp's has tried to push my sick policies. They are 110% more conscious about determining if their child is really sick or not now. They no longer leave it up to me.... Use that one little clause and it will change your life! (Haha, I sound like an infomercial! )
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Cat Herder 09:37 AM 07-08-2011
Originally Posted by Blackcat31:
Ooooo....I have to pipe in here and say that Cat's added addendum REALLY REALLY works!!! Since adding that little clause, NONE, (seriously, NOT one) of my dcp's has tried to push my sick policies. They are 110% more conscious about determining if their child is really sick or not now. They no longer leave it up to me.... Use that one little clause and it will change your life! (Haha, I sound like an infomercial! )
Glad it works for you, too BlackCat!!

I think I added that one after a former client said "Yeah, I figured you'd be calling soon, haha. I'm done anyway, I just needed a few hours to catch up on charts before I had to call out. I am on my way."

Strep....with 2 newborns in our group.
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Unregistered 09:51 AM 07-08-2011
Originally Posted by Sdcp16:
I have been doing daycare now for over 12 yrs and have absolutely no backbone! We live in a very small town and there are 3 home daycare providers, all of us seeming to have similiar contracts/policies. I have a great contract and handbook but so many families don't seem to uphold the rules and I seem to have an issue confronting them on it! How do you all handle sick kids?? I seem to often have parents come in my door at 7:30 am and inform me that their child had a fever last night or threw up but they think it was just a fluke thing, etc. I get so frustrated that these adults don't seem to think there's a problem with this behavior but also frustrated at myself that I can't be more forceful! Any ideas? Suggestions???
I have several doctors over the years that have vouched that their kids got fevers with teething and they believe the fever/teething theory that teething doesn't bring fevers is bunk. If a child is legit sick, the fever will stay or come back within 4 hours of giving fever reducer, not just magically go away. If a child has legit diarhea, it will stay until it's ran its course. Legit diarhea is 3+ exclusive watery (not whipped) in a hour period of time according to every doctor my child has ever seen over the years and they've all agreed that they are sick and tired of daycares sending kids home for 1 loose stool in an 8 hour period of time, medically just doesn't exist. (Different docs because I've had different insurance companies through the years.) I have a question for you . . . have you ever sent a child home for a fever or diarhea only to find out from the doctor less than an hour later that the child had neither? My child has only been legitamately sick and legitamately gotten sent home 1 time in all these years. Yes, 1 time. All other times, he's gotten sick at home during the night and I have kept him home no questions asked - high fevers that wouldn't go away, puked in his bed, etc. I can always tell because he doesn't act quiet right, so I always know to keep an eye on him. He's had lots of colds over the years. I can understand your frustration, but it's very annoying for a parent to drive all the way back to daycare from work only to find their child smiling and playing just fine and being cool to the touch, not warm. Know what I did? Started going to the doctor immediately on pickup and then sending my child back to daycare same day or next day with a doctor's note. Funny, how they stopped sending my kid home shortly thereafter and how the daycare would never take his temp in front of me to prove he even had a fever. Coincidence? I don't think so. I just agree with our doctors, that daycares are way to sensitive to child illness. It's the way kids build up immunity. In home care, I can understand that if you get sick, then you have to close. I get that, no arguement there, as long as your contracts state that and parents agreed to it. I'm not saying this stuff to start an argument, just stating the facts of what actually happened to me. My only final point is that our doctors have confirmed that there are many illnesses that happen and go away overnight or within a couple of hours, etc, but that they shouldn't be excluded from daycare and it's not contagious. My child has puked up dinner that he didn't like to begin with or if he ate way too much at a party, kiddie indigestion, child reflux. Kids get sick if something didn't agree with them - feed them sugar and junk food all day, that's a guaranteed next morning butt blaster or overnight puker but not something that other kids are going to get sick from and it's certainly not contagious. I know you have your policies, but much of it is common sense. Legit sickness stays, indigestion goes away.
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Tags:enforcing policies - consistency, illness policy, provider - burnout risk, provider accountability
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