This is a discussion post. The post is an expression of the writer’s own position.
Debate editor Anders Sønderup writes in an editorial that the last thing worried parents need is scolding from the doctor when they show up or contact the on-call doctor with common childhood ailments.
I don’t agree with that. The emergency room should only be used for serious, acutely occurring illnesses, and not for overprotective curling mothers, who themselves have been bottled up with overreactions and fed Panodiler alternately.
In my childhood we had a natural relationship with the diseases and ailments that often haunted the children, which were measles, chicken pox, mumps, stomach ache with vomiting etc. unpleasant difficulties.
But when the women entered the labor market, they did not have time to take care of their sick children, which is why vaccinations started.
Today, we have developed into a collection of slobberheads who moan regarding everything because we have no experience with various children’s ailments, and children’s normal reactions to them.
In my childhood, I never experienced children being fed painkillers. The wildest thing we were served was a lump of sugar with drops of camphor on it if we had a sore throat or elsewhere, which must have had an effect, as I don’t recall being bedridden due to childhood illnesses.
Fortunately, most good and useful things have happened with development, apart from humanity, which seems more complacent and self-fixated.
2024-03-03 14:23:59
#emergency #room #illness #overprotective #curling #mothers