Monday, December 16, 2013

Who's Cheaper? Woolworths, Pharmacies and Chemist Warehouse

Since the birth of our daughter, I have had to acquaint myself with the world of chemists and pharmacies and quickly realised how they manage to survive without me all these years. In Perth, I found out that there are some things massively marked up in my local Soul Pattinson Pharmacy compared to Chemist Warehouse and Woolworths.

Baby Formula - NAN HA Gold 1 - Woolworths $22.40, BigW $24, Chemist Warehouse $24

Little Fess Nose Spray for blocked nose - Soul Pattinson $15.99, Chemist Warehouse $9.99

EDIT 2016: Added this one in 2016, got stung buying Nurofen for children so I need to let you know about this...

Nurofen for Children 200mL - Soul Pattinson $27, Chemist Warehouse $13




Friday, November 1, 2013

The Delivery As We Never Expected It

We thank God that our little girl made it out after a event riddled labour which started on Wednesday. Just before lunch, my wife noticed blood in her pad and called me at work that we may have to go to the hospital. It's been a month since the birth but I've backdated this post.

After checking things out, they confirmed that she was in early labour. It was hard to imagine that the time had come that our little girl was finally making her debut on planet earth. Well, the strange feeling didn't last long as we were soon told to go home and continue early labour "somewhere comfortable".

On Thursday, we thought that the pain and the frequency of the contractions warranted another trip to the hospital. After another CTG the contractions were not frequent enough and we were sent home again. We used whatsapp to keep recording each contraction which was coming in at about every 15 minutes.

She then had an emergency. Her tummy suddenly had two baby bumps, not just one! She said she had some pain near her bladder, she hadn't urinated since the morning and we decided we need to go to the hospital. Now and fast.

We got to the hospital and their assessment was that she had a bladder blocked by the baby's head. She would need a catheter inserted to manually drain the bladder. 1.1 litres came out into a bag.

The doctor said he would need to break her waters because of the situation, we were sent to the labour ward and she was hooked to an inducer. Mid way through the evening she decided that she would like to get an epidural, something we didn't really think we would do.

The evening wore on, and quite uneventful as each contraction came and went without much of a reaction from my wife. Obviously the epidural hit the right spot. At one point she was dilated to 7cm so we were expecting that she would be delivering in the next few hours. Four hours passed and she was still at 7cm! The c word was starting to come up when a midwife asked her to get on her side. Half an hour later, the doctor said she could now deliver naturally as she was fully dilated! However, they recommended an episiotomy, she went ahead with it but during the birth, she suffered a third degree tear! Within half an hour, she was whisked away to the operation theatre and I was left holding Abigail in my arms in an empty labour ward, our little girl straining to turn her head looking around the deserted room quietly. She was finally here!

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Does it Matter How Much Leave I Take?

How much leave should I take for the birth of my girl? It's a question many dads have asked and interestingly, there seems to be no norm that I have come across amongst potential and existing dads. However, a recent study has shown that fathers who took two weeks or more of leave for the birth of their child are more likely to be engaged in the child's life in the future. Here's the article I read today which seems to have decided for me to take that two weeks leave (or more).

Paternity leave delivers dad a hands-on benefit - and a surprise


As Marcus Ward leans back on his living room couch, gently rocking his three-week-old daughter Zoe, he muses that the paternity leave he took after her birth wasn't quite what he had imagined it would be.
Unlike the birth of his son Max two years ago, when Ward was forced to return to work for financial reasons after three days off, this time the self-employed plumber gave himself two weeks' leave. In that time some things were as he expected - it was time filled with love and wonder, endless nappy changing and sleepless nights.

But the father-child bonding mostly occurred, he says, between him and his son rather than with his newborn. ''It is probably the most time I have ever spent with Max, just us. It was the first time I could turn my phone off and be a dad. Normally all I do is work, then home and spend an hour with the kids at night … But it was nice to wake up and give Max breakfast.''

Source: Father's Leave, Father's Involvement and Child Development.
Source: Father's Leave, Father's Involvement and Child Development.
Ward says the leave has been important for him and his children and crucial in helping his wife during the biggest transitions of their lives.

While the benefits of this kind of leave for fathers and mothers has been well documented, an international study has revealed that a father's leave can also have significant impact on children's cognitive development.
According to the study - drawn from data from Australia, Denmark, Britain and the United States - fathers who take a long period of leave (two weeks or more) after a birth are more likely to regularly engage in early child-caring tasks such as feeding and reading bedtime stories than fathers who do not take time off. The study, which will be presented to a conference in Melbourne next month, also found that those children did better in their early years, had greater cognitive development and better school readiness.

The study's Australian author, Dr Jennifer Baxter, said the results revealed a strong relationship between fathers' leave-taking at birth and their subsequent involvement in the lives of their children.

''Father's leave is linked to more involvement in childcare activities such as helping a baby to eat, changing nappies, getting up in the night, bathing and reading to a child, compared to fathers who took no leave,'' Dr Baxter said. "There was some evidence of children having better cognitive outcomes when fathers were more involved early on in their lives.

''In Australia, fathers' involvement was linked with better scores for one out of four cognitive tests … the strongest association was observed in the United Kingdom, where children with highly involved fathers were faring better at ages two to three and four to five according to a number of cognitive tests, than children with less involved fathers.''

In each country it found that the overwhelming majority of fathers (more than 80 per cent) took some leave at the birth of their child. In Australia, 60 per cent of fathers took two weeks or more compared with 91 per cent in Denmark and 33 per cent in the US.

Dr Baxter, a senior researcher with the Australian Institute of Family Studies, said in Australia and the US, public policies to promote fathers' involvement were less developed. Denmark, she said, has a 40-year history of work-family policies and work and care responsibilities were more often viewed as the responsibility of both parents.

The Australian results were based on surveys with 4000 families with children who were born in 2003-04. Since then paternity leave is likely to have increased with the introduction of fathers' paid leave earlier this year. Under the Coalition's paid parental leave policy, from July 1, 2015, fathers will be eligible for two weeks' leave at full salary.

Read more: http://www.watoday.com.au/national/paternity-leave-delivers-dad-a-handson-benefit--and-a-surprise-20131011-2ve2a.html#ixzz2hWNUWrHV

Friday, September 6, 2013

Abbott Brings National Attention to Father Daughter Relationships

As the election is just hours away now, I found this article quite interesting. Regardless of who you are voting for tomorrow, I'm sure many would agree with the author's sentiments. I remember before this article, there were some commentators asking whether it was appropriate for Abbott to hold his daughter's hand when crossing the road. There was a good response to that issue here if you are interested, from West Australian of the Year Professor Bruce Robinson which you should definitely listen to. 

Abbott the father deserves more respect

Date September 6, 2013

I'll tell you what's creepy: journalists and media taking an everyday comment from the probable next leader of our country about his daughters being "not bad-looking" and sexualising it like a pack of sticky schoolkids who can't watch a deodorant ad without sniggering.

There are many subjects upon which I do not agree with Tony Abbott but his decision this week to appeal to Big Brother's household of twenty-something fame whores while standing beside his daughters wasn't a bad one.

Did we really expect a policy pitch in 24 seconds? Why not try to manufacture some semblance of empathy with young Australians by showing he also lives and regularly talks with other young Australians - his children?

Yet a father saying his daughters were "not bad-looking" was immediately translated as ''vote for me because my daughters are hot" by one reporter. Even more vile was the characterisation by another writer, for an esteemed masthead, likening the appearance as a "man flanked with babes like an oily ganglord entering a nightclub".

Politicians have long decided it's acceptable to put words into people's mouths, invent motivations for others and just plain make up stuff when they feel like it. But we're truly lost if this has become the accepted method of operation for our media.

Words, as we're constantly reminded by Abbott's critics, matter. "Not bad-looking" has no sexual connotations, particularly when said by a father, while "hot", a word never uttered by Abbott, implies sexual arousal in the observer.

Motives, as we're constantly reminded by Abbott's critics, matter. Standing beside your children in a political campaign is as old as politics. Abbott has gone out of his way on many occasions to describe the intelligence, opinions, aptitude and energy of his three tertiary-educated daughters, yet it is a gender-aware media-writer that diminished them as "babes ... entering a nightclub".

Abbott, certainly, has perception problems when it comes to his attitudes to women, but to suggest a man complimenting the looks of his children is sexist or reduces them to ornamentation is just crude, offensive barrow-pushing.

The innuendo the comment was somehow, vaguely incestuous - and let's not kid ourselves this wasn't one of the snide implications of this piece - should be met with contempt and illustrates the lengths so many sulking reporters will go to to tarnish a politician they do not agree with.

I can't say I'm overly excited about the prospect of Abbott as our next PM, but I am looking forward to seeing the father-daughter relationship given some prominence and respect over the next three years.

If you watched Annabel Crabb's excellent Kitchen Cabinet interview with Abbott and two of his daughters on Tuesday night, what you'll plainly see is a 55-year-old man who has raised bright, opinionated 20-something children who respect and actually like being around him.

How many parents can make that claim?

Saturday, August 10, 2013

So how was the expo?

Well we just got back from the Perth Pregnancy, Babies and Children Expo at the Claremont showground which took about two hours for us to quickly see everything. We had to leave early but I am sure we could have been there for another few more hours.

So how was it? It was quite informative and interesting with heaps of brands and businesses represented there. The small stores cost just under $2000 to be there which probably was more than worth it for participating businesses. Everyone walked around almost like waving money in the air, ready to spend big on anything from bibs to cots. We managed to buy a three wheeler stroller that we have been eyeing for a while. Going into the show, we saw the Baby Jogger City Mini at some stores for $399 and the best price was Baby Bunting for $329 in their recent catalogue. At the expo, we bought the City Mini for $319 including a cupholder which retails at $30 so we saved a nice $40

Free stuff For those looking to pick up free stuff, Panadol gave away a baby guidebook, a handy night light, baby forehead thermometer and a... piece of cloth? Closer to Nature were handing out free feeding bottles, there were plenty of free antibacterial wipes (guess you can't have enough of those), window shades and fruit puree drinks.

Car Parking costs $5 which was quite convenient considering that it was raining pretty intermittently during the day. If you want to check it out, you still have till 5pm tomorrow to have a look.

Friday, August 9, 2013

Free tickets to Perth Pregnancy, Babies & Children’s Expo

Tomorrow is Perth's Pregnancy, Babies & Children’s Expo which we managed to score free tickets to. I wonder what it would be like with so many children, babies and pregnant ladies. Anyway, if you happen to be going or already went, and you know some good deals to be had from there, please post them in the comments below.

Friday, July 19, 2013

Virtual Parenting a Moral Failure in 21st Century

We hear parents all the time boasting about how easy it is to shut their children up by giving them the iphone or ipad or perhaps switching on a favourite TV show. There are many times we have had a good laugh about it and in many ways, we pathetic bystanders encourage our friends to continue the neglect of their children. Here's an abstract of an article taken from the Daily Telegraph written by Miranda Devine that looks at the moral failure of virtual parenting that is worth reading if you are or are going to be a parent. 

IT’S something we all know. Busy lives and technology are intruding on crucial family time.
We see the consequences around us in the rise of the unruly brat and a new lost generation of depression-prone adolescents. After all, if your parents don’t care enough to spend time with you, it’s hard to feel worthwhile.
The latest survey to sound the warning is from Virgin Holidays, which showed parents are spending less than eight hours a week of quality time with their children, on average; that breaks down to only 39 minutes per weekday, rising to just over an hour on Saturdays and Sundays.
Reasons parents gave for neglecting family time included that “the children are watching TV” or “the children are playing computer games”.
Who is the parent here? It is a woeful tale with worrying implications for the future.
A generation of children who are virtually bringing up themselves, with the help of whatever is beaming at them through their screens.
The latest survey comes off the back of another poll last year from the British Family and Parenting Institute, showing the number one thing children want is more time with their parents.
Six out of 10 kids complained their parents didn’t spend enough time with the family. Why aren’t we listening?
The one thing children need more than anything else is parental attention. It can be hard for busy parents, especially with taciturn teenagers whose idea of conversation is a sarcastic grunt.
But psychologists are warning we’re raising a generation of “Tamagotchi Kids” - children brought up by computers and TVs and smart phones.
With parents on their laptops while watching TV in one room and the children engrossed in their own digital entertainments in another, it can be easy to spend an entire evening communing less with your offspring than you did with the guy you bought your coffee from on the way to work.
It is really a facsimile of family life when everyone is isolated contentedly in their own activity.
You might be in the same house with your children but you are not doing your job as a parent. You’re not imprinting your values, imparting their worth, setting boundaries and teaching them how to be a good person.
Adolescent psychiatrist Dr Michael Carr-Gregg coined the term “Tamagotchi Parenting” after the electronic game that became a craze in Japan, in which you pressed buttons to feed and water a virtual pet.
He has been concerned about the rise of remote control parenting because it denies children the boundaries they crave. They become isolated from their parents by an “emotional firewall”, reserving their emotional relationships for friends, with whom they are permanently connected, electronically.
A Year 7 teacher once told me she saw a difference between the Generation Y she had been teaching and the new digital natives, the 12- and 13-year-olds of Generation Z coming through.
Born roughly since the mid-1990s, Gen Z is born virtually with a smart phone in their hands. They are the first post-technological revolution generation and their default reality is radically different from anything before.
But this teacher sees the dark side of her charges’ facility with digital technology. So immersed are they in their screens that she fears they are losing the ability to read facial expressions, a prerequisite for empathy.
Carr-Gregg predicts a “decline in civic connectedness and ... social capital” as a consequence.
Parenting is not like a My Three Sons episode where Big Daddy draws the children around for the latest sermon from the mount.
All the little incidental interactions when you are spending time with children add up to a coherent moral fabric with which they can fashion their character.
Mothers I know often say the best time to connect with their sons is in the car while ferrying them to sport, when they open up about their lives, comfortable with the parallel nature of the interaction, and mum too busy looking at the road to turn her laser eyes to his soul.
A full-time mother of nine children I know always makes a point of having a cup of tea alone after her husband has gone to bed so that any child who wants a private chat knows where to find her.
These surveys are a wake-up call to all of us to make spending extra time with our children the priority.
Turn off the screens, play a game, make a meal together, go for a walk, read a book aloud. Try to get that eight hours a week up to 15.
Yes, we’re all busy but most parents should be able to claw time back from less pressing activities.
Nothing is more important than bringing up the next generation. 

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

How Much Does Your Pregnancy Cost?

Just wondering whether anyone out there tracked ALL their expenses relating to their pregnancy? I was reading an article in the New York Times which claims that America is the most expensive place to give birth in the world because their health system is such a capital market that it can cost between $4,000 and $45,000 to give birth! Here's some of the article:

LACONIA, N.H. — Seven months pregnant, at a time when most expectant couples are stockpiling diapers and choosingcar seats, RenĂ©e Martin was struggling with bigger purchases.
At a prenatal class in March, she was told about epiduralanesthesia and was given the option of using a birthing tub during labor. To each offer, she had one gnawing question: “How much is that going to cost?”
Though Ms. Martin, 31, and her husband, Mark Willett, are both professionals with health insurance, her current policy does not cover maternity care. So the couple had to approach the nine months that led to the birth of their daughter in May like an extended shopping trip though the American health care bazaar, sorting through an array of maternity services that most often have no clear price and — with no insurer to haggle on their behalf — trying to negotiate discounts from hospitals and doctors.

When she became pregnant, Ms. Martin called her local hospital inquiring about the price of maternity care; the finance office at first said it did not know, and then gave her a range of $4,000 to $45,000. “It was unreal,” Ms. Martin said. “I was like, How could you not know this? You’re a hospital.”
Read the rest o the article here.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Baby kicks, butterflies or butterfly kicks?

One of pregnancy's simple pleasures is feeling the baby kicks. Not sure whether they really are kicks or an overenthusiastic arm or a head whilst doing laps of the womb. For some mothers waiting for their first baby kick, books and magazines say that they are like a butterfly in your stomach sensation (whatever that would feel like).


Anyway, recently baby has been "kicking" quite a bit. It seems like she is most active when we are about to go to bed. So what is actually going on when the baby is kicking? Is the baby responding to some spicy food or Fanta? According to Ask.com, babies kick in response to the mother's change in position or in response to sounds. They could also kick as they flex and stretch their limbs as they develop.

In another website, they say that classical music such as Vivaldi calms the baby down but babies get agitated by Beethoven. Whilst they can hear and react, their ability to think only begins around the eight month mark.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Which Baby Seat? Choices choices

With some big purchases coming up, I decided to sign up to Choice which does comparisons between various products and gives recommendations. It costs about $20 per month which if you are a keen comparer, it's money well spent. 

We are at the 21st week and we are looking at baby car restraints. I looked at the choice website to see what articles they had on child car seat restraints and came across a comparison of baby seats that I thought was exhaustive. Just look at the list! 

Convertible rearward-facing restraints

  • Babylove Ezy Switch Charcoal BL72A/2010
  • Go Safe Cleo 4790
  • Infa-Secure Cosi-Safe 
  • Infa-Secure Style-Rider 
  • Infa-Secure Luxi Ride (designed for use as a rearward-facing restraint so can accommodate a newborn to a child eight years of 
  • Infa-Secure Mirage (designed for use as a rearward-facing restraint so can accommodate a newborn to a child eight years of 
  • Mother's Choice Emperor 
  • Mother's Choice Carrera 
  • Safety 1st DB2010 Car Seat Nero GT #
  • Safe-N-Sound Meridian AHR Tilt&Adjust Head Rest 
  • Safe-N-Sound Platinum AHR Air Cushion 
  • ZuZu GS2010 Car Seat Lexington #011693
Convertible forward-facing restraints

  • Infa-Secure Comfi Cruiser
  • Infa-Secure Roamer+
  • Maxi-Cosi Complete Air
  • Infa-Secure Luxi Ride (designed for use as a rearward-facing restraint so can accommodate a newborn to a child eight years of age)
  • Infa-Secure Mirage (designed for use as a rearward-facing restraint so can accommodate a newborn to a child eight years of age)
  • Cargo Marathon
  • Babylove Ezy Combo
  • Safe-n-Sound Maxi Rider AHR
  • Mother's Choice Prospect
  • Safety 1st Swish Air
The amazing thing is that the restraint I was looking for on the list... is not there! It's the Safe-n-Sound Guardian which is on special at Target for $174. Can someone reply with what they think of it?

For the record, CHOICE recommended the following baby restraints. 

Rearward-facing restraints

  • Infa-Secure Cosi Safe CS40CS
  • Infa-Secure Style Rider CS41SR
  • Safe-N-Sound Platinum AHR Air Cushion 3515
  • Babylove Ezy Switch Charcoal BL72A

Forward-facing restraints

  • Infa-Secure Comfi Cruiser
  • Infa-Secure Roamer+
  • Maxi-Cosi Complete Air
  • Cargo Marathon
  • Infa-Secure Luxi Ride (note: this seat is designed for use as a rearward-facing restraint so can accommodate a newborn to a child eight years of age)
  • Infa-Secure Mirage (note: this seat is designed for use as a rearward-facing restraint so can accommodate a newborn to a child eight years of age) 

Thursday, June 20, 2013

20 Week Ultrasound - It's a girl!

Today we went for the ultrasound which would tell us whether our baby is a boy or a girl. We were quite sure that the baby is a girl because we've had a name in mind since March for a girl but no name for a boy. It was half way through the scan that the lady finally asked whether we would like to know if it is a boy or a girl. "It's a girl!" I had to ask how certain she was and she said it is very certain so we finally have confirmation that our baby is a baby girl!

From there, we went straight to Baby Bunting to have a look around and then to Garden City. Hey, it's the end of financial year sales! Might as well keep an eye out! Ended up getting a few items that were quite heavily reduced from Myers.

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Birth Choices Seminar - $20 can save you a lot of pain

"Is this the right street?"
"It's so dark" 
"That's what the address said" 

The high beam came on and the central locking checked as we pulled into Pearse Street in North Fremantle for our appointment at the Community Midwifery office. We arrived early and went in to have a look. The Birth Choices session was to start at 7pm and I was wondering whether this was such a good idea. Who would turn up and what would they be like? 


As Pip the facilitator kickstarted the meeting, everyone seemed comfortable as we introduced ourselves. The guys seemed to all be here for the same reason - to support our partners and to get educated. For $20, this session would tell us the choices that we have with giving birth. There are more choices than Public v Private and as we learnt, the choice between Natural v Cesarean was no longer just choosing between apples and oranges. 

Many of us came to realise that there was an incentive for private hospitals to encourage planned or cesarean births even though it is more risky for the mother. The lack of continuity of care in the birth process whether we went private or public took many of us by surprise. The other option is to go with a community midwife program. If you are accepted, you will be assigned two midwives who will accompany the mother through the process starting from 16 weeks. One of the two midwives will be the one going to the hospital or birth centre with you and if everything works according to plan, she will also be the one delivering the baby - not an obstetrician. For people in Australia, this sounds alarming, but we don't realise that in most other places in the world, a midwife would be the one delivering the baby. 

Another stand out thing I learnt from the session was about water births. Why do people have water births? I never realised that the reason for water births was not because the couple were into something like scientology or something. It is actually a natural way of easing the pain of the mother as she gives birth. Strangely, doctors seem to see epidurals (injection near the spine as a pain killer) as safer than a bath full of salty water. 

We enjoyed attending the Birth Choices seminar and wondered why hardly anyone else had heard of this. Why was such an important seminar found in the midst of shipping containers and anonymous streets of Fremantle? If you are having a baby in the future, you should get to one of these talks and "get educated". The Community Midwifery Program can be found here and information about the Birth Choices talk here.

Monday, March 4, 2013

So where were you when you found out you're a dad?

Where were you when you found out that you were going to be a dad? Today I was flying back from Sydney on my first business class flight in my life. I received a little message on my phone as the plane taxied to the terminal and I soaked up my last moments in business class. The image was sent hours into the transcontinental flight and only featured a little strip with two lines that simply announced one thing - I'm going to be a dad!