Welcome! This is a website that everyone can build together. It's easy!

HomeThis is a featured page

Hello, and welcome to our soon-to-be-Moms Club! How are you going on today? How are you feeling? I hope that you're doing well, and that the aches and worries in your mind at the present time will soon "evaporate" into thin air!!! Do please read along and see what I can do to help you.

This is a site for all pregnant, planning-to-be- pregnant, or future mothers. The text is simple and easy to understand, and adapted for use even by young or anonymous senders.

Do feel free to tell me all about your aches and worries. There are other moms-to-be out there who are more than willing to help us to solve you presently plaguing problem. So, please contribute your comments and suggestions to this website and see what happens.

First, we'll see some possible ways by which we may approach your problem, all positive and envigorating. Next, we'll see the possible positive choices that you can make, and rank them in their order of importance. After this, we can try to stimulate our brain cells into working out a possible scenario for the different choices working out. From these, you can pick the best choice that fits your situation and--there, you have it!!!

Remember, this decision or choice of yours is your own. We only helped you to organize and choose. The final decision is still your own.

Thank you very much for sharing your views and comments on this page, in case you did so . . . .




Safety in the Home
How can you keep your home safe? Below are some suggestions from Reader's Digest Good Health Fact Book, 1995, p. 165.

Treat all medication with respect, whether standard over-the-counter remedies or powerful prescription drugs. The best place to store medicines, including seemingly harmless preparations such as cough mixture and iron tablets, is in a wall cabinet well out of the reach of children. It is also important to store them under conditions that ensure their effectiveness; improperly stored medication can become inactive or toxic. Consult your doctor or pharmacist if you are unsure about where to keep particular preparations. Otherwise, follow these suggestions for safe storage:

  • Most medication should be kept at room temperature in a dark, dry place. The bathroom, despite its popularity, is one of the worst places to keep certain medicines because a warm, humid atmosphere may reduce their effectiveness.
  • Always keep medicines in their original containers so that you don't forget what they are and can check the label for directions.
  • Keep medication away from direct sunlight, even when it is in a darkened container. Sunlight may cause it to deteriorate, to the point where it loses almost all its effectiveness.
  • Pharmacists are required to supply childproof caps for medicines that are taken orally. So if you suffer from a disorder such as arthritis, and would have difficulty opening such bottles, ask for a lid that is easier to remove.
  • Some medicines need to be stored in the fridge. But don't refrigerate medicine unless actually told by your pharmacist, and never let liquid formulations freeze.
  • Keep drugs with labels showing the date of expiry, which should not be exceeded. Milk of magnesia and aspirin can be kept for up to two years, provided they have been stored in a cool, dry place, away from direct sunlight.
  • Medicines in the following categories, by contrast, should be safely disposed of, as by being returned to a pharmacist.
  1. Tablets or capsules more than two years old or any that are chipped, cracked, powdery or discolored.
  2. Hardened, discoloured or separated ointments or creams.
  3. Thickened or discolored liquids.
  4. Cracked, leaking or hard tubes.
  5. Capsules that have softened, cracked or stuck together.
  6. Medicines with a changed odor, such as aspirin or paracetamol tablets that smell of vinegar.
  7. Eye drops that have been opened for more than 28 days.
  • Avoid taking aspirin for seven days before surgery, as it thins the blood.
  • Do not give aspirin to children under 12. It has been linked to Reye's syndrome, which can cause brain dysfunction and liver damage. Paracetamol is recommended instead.
  • Do not take ibuprofen if you are allergic to aspirin; you are probably allergic to both types of painkillers.
  • Do not take ibuprofen if you have a long-term kidney disease.
  • Do not take paracetamol if you have liver or kidney trouble.
  • Do not take standard aspirin or ibuprofen if you tend to suffer from indigestion or stomach ulcers. Instead, choose a buffered or coated variety.
  • Dispose of old prescription drugs. Some may have become ineffective or even dangerous if they have been stored for a very long time. Never throw them in the rubbish bin or flush them down the lavatory. Take them to your local pharmacy or hospital pharmacy department for safe disposal.











No user avatar
Graciana
Latest page update: made by Graciana , Jul 2 2006, 5:00 AM EDT (about this update About This Update Graciana Edited by Graciana

1 word added
425 words deleted

view changes

- complete history)
More Info: links to this page
Started By Thread Subject Replies Last Post
Anonymous Living with a Toddler 0 Oct 16 2008, 9:27 PM EDT by Anonymous
 
Thread started: Oct 16 2008, 9:27 PM EDT  Watch
My son, Jovin Caleb, is a fine fellow for knowing all his alphabets' proper tune and not any out of place, at age 4. He is a bundle of mischief, too, sometimes quarreling with his uncles and giving us all a hard time disciplining him. Yet he is a source of deep happiness, as well. For us in the family, Jovin is a pleasing treasure and a handsome lad, with his winsome smile and large doe eyes with thick lashes. He keeps on being a repeater of sentences said to him, in transliterations all his own.

Sometimes, we can't help but be reinvigorated by the way he laughs, snickers, and cuddles up to us. He is our source of pride, and we would really love to spend more days -- and year -- with him.

Living with a toddler can make you happy. It is always blissful to keep him within arm's length, for he may fall into mischief anytime. Likewise, he should be supervised at all times, for he can get cantankerous and belligerent with one sweep of the fairy's timed hand.

Wish it for now that we can all get together, for classes have ended for the first semester this school year, and a new one is in stride. Wish us luck, then, and the best of health. . . .
Do you find this valuable?    

Anonymous  (Get credit for your thread)


Showing 1 of 1 threads for this page