Illness in Infants: Prevention is better
than Cure!!
The
especial province of the mother is the prevention
of disease, not its cure. When disease attacks
the child, the mother has then a part to perform,
which it is especially important during the
epochs of infancy and childhood should be done
well. I refer to those duties which constitute
the maternal part of the management of disease.
Medical treatment, for its successful issue, is
greatly dependent upon a careful, pains-taking,
and judicious maternal superintendence. No
medical treatment can avail at any time, if
directions be only partially carried out, or be
negligently attended to; and will most assuredly
fail altogether, if counteracted by the erroneous
prejudices of ignorant attendants. But to the
affections of infancy and childhood, this remark
applies with great force; since, at this period,
disease is generally so sudden in its assaults,
and rapid in its progress, that unless the
measures prescribed are rigidly and promptly
administered, their exhibition is soon rendered
altogether fruitless.
The amount of suffering, too, may be greatly
lessened by the thoughtful and discerning
attentions of the mother. The wants and
necessities of the young child must be
anticipated; the fretfulness produced by disease,
soothed by kind and affectionate persuasion; and
the possibility of the sick and sensitive child
being exposed to harsh and ungentle conduct,
carefully provided against.
Again, not only is a firm and strict compliance
with medical directions in the administration of
remedies, of regimen, and general measures,
necessary, but an unbiased, faithful, and full
report of symptoms to the physician, when he
visits his little patient, is of the first
importance. An ignorant servant or nurse, unless
great caution be exercised by the medical
attendant, may, by an unintentional but erroneous
report of symptoms, produce a very wrong
impression upon his mind, as to the actual state
of the disease. His judgment may, as a
consequence, be biased in a wrong direction, and
the result prove seriously injurious to the
welldoing of the patient. The medical man cannot
sit hour after hour watching symptoms; hence the
great importance of their being faithfully
reported. This can alone be done by the mother,
or some person equally competent.
There are other weighty considerations which
might be adduced here, proving how much depends
upon efficient maternal management in the time of
sickness; but they will be severally dwelt upon,
when the diseases with which they are more
particularly connected are spoken of.
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