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Whatever happened to Call The Midwife?

(21 Posts)
merlotgran Sat 27-Sep-14 00:20:03

Oh, put your ego away and give the poor kid a break!

janerowena Sat 27-Sep-14 11:33:44

?

Soutra Sat 27-Sep-14 11:43:04

I don't get it either- wrong link?

Ana Sat 27-Sep-14 11:44:10

Wot you on about, merlot? confused

ninathenana Sat 27-Sep-14 13:05:40

If you scroll down there is an article about a dad and baby. However I don't see that it's news worthy. Water births are not much different to this.

merlotgran Sat 27-Sep-14 14:05:13

www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2771342/In-deep-end-baby-s-barely-day-old-Father-introduces-newborn-son-joys-baby-aquatics-trip-swimming-pool.html

Sorry, wrong link. I checked it as well so the gremlins must have snuck in overnight.

durhamjen Sat 27-Sep-14 14:06:14

If it is that, it's not his ego, but his bank balance. He must want more customers.
The Water Babies instructor near me is a woman. I cannot imagine her being in the pool 36 hours after her baby was born.

janerowena Sat 27-Sep-14 15:14:24

I waited until six months for both mine, purely because I wouldn't have wanted to subject them to all those bacteria.

merlotgran Sat 27-Sep-14 17:28:24

I think you're right, durhamjen but the risk assessment would be a nightmare if loads of newly delivered mums staggered in with their newborns. grin

ninathenana Sat 27-Sep-14 18:25:09

It was in a hydrotherapy pool at the hospital. Presumably all precautions are taken regarding bacteria.

janerowena Sat 27-Sep-14 18:27:45

Maybe nowadays - but back then us new mums were dumped in the learner pool straight after an infant class! The lady taking the course would say 'give the pool ten minutes to clear!' and she wasn't talking about the children...

rosequartz Sat 27-Sep-14 21:12:34

Nothing wrong with introducing a newborn to water, but not in a public pool, especially one at a hospital. I would be worried about bacteria, and worried too if there was a certain level of chlorine in the water which surely would not be good for a newborn's skin? Perhaps the photo of the family is not a good one, but does the little girl look as if she has a touch of eczema on her cheeks?

Ana Sat 27-Sep-14 21:44:51

phoenix is a boy, rosequartz, and it wasn't a public swimming pool.

Ana Sat 27-Sep-14 21:47:33

Sorry - that should have been Phoenix! Not to be confused etc...

rosequartz Sat 27-Sep-14 23:18:50

I know, Ana, but his older sister who was mentioned in the article is also a swimmer - one of the photos shows the whole family, and the older sibling is the one I was referring to.

It was the hydrotherapy pool at Derriford Hospital, presumably chlorinated, but if it was as clean as the rest of the hospital last time I was there, I wouldn't care to put a newborn into the pool. Let 's hope it is lovely and sterile.

rosequartz Sat 27-Sep-14 23:23:45

And a free whole page advert in a national newspaper for his business!

janerowena Sun 28-Sep-14 15:57:23

That's not his fault though, surely, what the DM choose to print?

rosequartz Sun 28-Sep-14 15:58:37

Yes, janer, but how did they know in the first place? And the photos are all beautifully posed.

rosequartz Sun 28-Sep-14 15:59:33

Posted before I finished!!

It just came across as an admiring advert for his franchise; perhaps someone he knows works for the paper and he alerted them.

janerowena Sun 28-Sep-14 16:01:22

Possibly. Or their child goes to his classes.

rosequartz Sun 28-Sep-14 16:04:06

All rather odd. I can't see a Daily Mail reporter hanging around Derriford Hospital in Plymouth on the off-chance of an interesting story!