Originally posted by chugs
Please help, she's a worried. here are the facts i have.
1. she has contracted the chicken pox
2. she got vaccinated about 1 week ago (because another relative caught it)
3. she is showing symptoms and the doctor says she does have it.
4. she never had chicken pox before
5. she has twins (1 boy, 1 girl) who are one month old.
6. she never had the chicken pox because she's from india and only emigrated less than a year ago.
So the questions are.
Can she breast feed? (does she have any antibodies that will help or hurt the babies)
How much contact can she have with the babies, if any at all?
Is it correct to assume the babies are to young to be vacinnated.
what other precautions (obviously other than contacting a pedetrician) do you recommend.
Thank you in advance for reading my long post, and any insights you can provide.
I checked a bunch of breastfeeding site and they all said to breastfeed as the babies have already been exposed and breastmilk is great for antibodies, see the following quote from La Leche League:
"Mothers have breastfed their babies through a variety of illnesses, from colds and infections to chronic conditions including asthma and diabetes. Your baby is exposed to any illness you have before you know you are sick. One of the beauties of human milk is that when your body makes antibodies to combat an illness, these antibodies are passed directly into your milk, giving protection and disease-fighting abilities to your baby, too"
You do need to contact a physician however.
Best wishes.
steph