POPSUGAR UK

What You Need to Know Before You or Your Kids Get COVID-19

17/04/2020 - 04:45 PM

Mother helping son to blow his nose

For many young families, we're spending so much time doing our best to avoid the spread of the novel coronavirus that we haven't fully prepared ourselves for what we should do if we – or another member of our household – contracts COVID-19.

Sasha Romary, a postpartum doula and sleep consultant for the online resource Cleo [1], and her husband were both infected and had to simultaneously care for their two children, including their four-year-old son who also showed mild symptoms in line with the virus.

"It started with a head cold and then onto the fever, chills, headache and shortness of breath," said Sasha, who noted that she and her husband had some "mild stomach issues" the week before that may have been connected. "The shortness of breath was a real struggle. It felt like I was in extremely high altitude with a dull pain when I tried to breathe in fully."

What You Should Do If You Start to Feel Sick

One of the most shocking aspects of their COVID experience was, Sasha told POPSUGAR, "how difficult it was to reach someone." She said that no one ever called them back to get tested: "We were brushed off as not a priority."

"I was also shocked at how difficult it was to reach someone and how we were brushed off as not a priority."

A low-priority status might be what otherwise healthy parents in their 30s and 40s should expect as hospitals are overwhelmed with more and more intensive cases. Rebekah Wheeler, a registered nurse and certified midwife who is a lead advisor for Cleo [3], explained that screening tests are, in most cases, limited [4] to cases where someone requires hospitalisation or where their doctor has ordered a test because of known exposure or other health conditions that make them higher risk for severe symptoms.

Still, she recommended that as soon as families show any symptoms, they "figure out how your paediatric provider and your own primary care provider are handling virtual visits." In fact, even before anyone is sick, she advised working parents check their own GP's telemedicine options while they have the time and energy to do so.

Then, Rebekah said, stay put.

"Don't go into the clinic or hospital," she warned. "You'll just risk infecting others, acquiring the infection yourselves if you or your kid didn't have it already, and there's no treatment for mild cases beyond what you can already give at home."

How You Should Care For Kids Showing COVID-19 Symptoms

Parents may never know for certain if their child contracted COVID-19 or just a run-of-the-mill virus. Because most kids have very mild illnesses [5], they will never get screened.

Still, Rebekah noted that parents should take note if their child's symptoms present as a fever or dry cough – without much mucous or phlegm.

"Paracetamol and fever reducers are key," Rebekah said. "Stick to over-the-counter medications approved by your paediatric provider. Keeping kids hydrated, fed, and rested are also important."

How You Should Care For Kids If You Are Showing COVID-19 Symptoms

It's not likely, but if you are sick and your partner or another adult within your home is not symptomatic, it is recommended that you quarantine yourself.

"Separate the sick people in the household from those who aren't sick," Rebekah said. "If possible, that's a separate room, including a separate bathroom." If there's only one shared bathroom, cleaning surfaces with disinfectant is essential.

If this setup means a parent is isolated from their kids, she suggested doorway visits, maintaining six feet of space, and other "distance games" so they can still feel connected. "Let them see the sick parent and that they're OK," she said. "Let them do virtual visits, too. Watch movies 'together' by syncing up two screens. Play music and sing together."

How You Should Care For Kids If Both Parents Are Showing COVID-19 Symptoms

Unfortunately for Sasha, because both she and her husband were simultaneously sick, they couldn't isolate themselves even if they wanted to.

"Isolating within your home is so challenging, especially with kids," she said. "They cuddle, share germs, put everything in their mouths. Given that we probably were exposed much earlier than when we actually showed symptoms and were unaware, I think it would have been pretty impossible in our case. We have a small apartment, and there would not be a way to isolate one person from the rest of the family."

"Some shifts [with our kids] were only 10 to 15 minutes before we needed to tap out."

So, the parents took shifts caring for their kids. "Some shifts were only 10 to 15 minutes before we needed to tap out," Sasha said. After awhile, they were able to extend it to an hour or two.

Rebekah concurred that's the best many families in similar situations can do, and that if all adults in a household are sick, it's highly unlikely that the kids haven't been exposed. Still, it's impossible to predict how families will respond to COVID-19.

"The severity of symptoms varies tremendously, even within a family, often leaving one parent flat out on their back and the other pretty well functioning," she said, adding that parents should "use whatever energy and resources you have to get through it" while still doing their best to "wash hands before touching their kids, wipe down surfaces, and all lay low together."

Of course, she made it clear that anyone with pre-existing conditions should be carefully considered: "If you have a child with particular risks for severe disease, you may want to do everything possible to not expose them to actively sick parents."

For Sasha, the symptoms came and were completely gone within 10 days. Her 4-year-old felt completely better after just three days, and she was "at 80 percent" within a week.

How Families Affected By COVID-19 Can Receive Support

Working parents may be eligible to claim Statutory Sick Pay [7] (SSP) from your employer, in the event that they or a dependent contracts COVID-19. Under this scheme, you are entitled to receive £95.85 a week for up to 28 weeks if you are unable to work because you've had coronavirus or have been self-isolating, have been off work for longer than four days, and if the period of sickness started after 13 March, 2020.

Additionally, the government has introduced a national scheme to provide supermarket vouchers [8] to families that would usually participate in the free school meals program.

POPSUGAR aims to give you the most accurate and up-to-date information about the coronavirus, but details and recommendations about this pandemic may have changed since publication. For the latest information on COVID-19, please check out resources from the WHO [9], the NHS [10], and GOV.UK [11].


Source URL
https://www.popsugar.co.uk/parenting/what-to-do-if-you-or-your-family-gets-sick-from-coronavirus-47362377