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Dr. Mom

A blog written by a special needs mom, disciple of Christ, writer, business owner, and wife – from special needs thoughts to spiritual reflections, this is a safe place for me to share.

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“How to explain, the instinct that washes over me.
The doctors, they come.
The nurses - they sometimes care.
But I’m the one,
Who’s Dr Mom.

I know more, I see more.
I see when she holds her breath -
I see when her eyes become tired.
The seizures? They’re sub-clinical.
But sometimes, I see those too.

Her eyes, I watch them.
Her little hands,
I watch their every move.
You say I have no training -
you’ve been in school for years.
But I held her inside me,
for ten long months -
I felt her every move.
There’s something about a mother with a baby -
She’s the smartest expert there is.
Trust yourself -
you know your baby best.
Don’t be ashamed,
to be Dr. Mom.”

Excerpt From
Good Pastures
Sylvia Anne Pollard
This material may be protected by copyright

recipe

A G-Tube Formula Recipe that Warms Your Heart: Pumpkin Pie
  • Pediatric G-Tube Feeding

A G-Tube Formula Recipe that Warms Your Heart: Pumpkin Pie

April 26, 2025July 22, 2025 Sylvia1Tagged gtube, homemade, recipe

There is indeed a whirlwind of emotions when it comes to feeding your baby through a tube. Some days you won’t even mind it, it’ll be systematic, and other days it hits you like a brick and it’s all you can think about. Those are the days I need recipes like this – Paigey’s Pumpkin […]

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4 mins read

neuro divergent movements to excitement… let’s get used to it #specialneeds #neurologicaldisorder
If you’re a parent or caregiver of a medically complex child, learning to use a pulse oximeter can feel overwhelming at first. In this video, I walk you through how to use a pulse oximeter on your child, how to place it correctly, and how to understand the numbers you see — especially when you’re tired, anxious, or second-guessing yourself.

This video is made for parents, not medical professionals. Whether your child has respiratory issues, neurological conditions, a trach, is medically fragile, or you’ve been sent home with monitoring equipment — you’re not alone.

👇 In this video, we cover:

What a pulse oximeter measures in children

How to place the probe on a baby or child

How to read oxygen saturation (SpO₂) and heart rate

Common reasons readings look “off”

Tips to get more accurate readings at home

🫶 Important reminder: Numbers are tools — not a replacement for your instincts as a parent. Always look at the child first, not the monitor!

Links to Supplies:
Posey Holder: https://a.co/d/eNCZp2G
Colorful Coban Tape: https://a.co/d/hrRtX9h
Pulse Oximeter Basics for Medically Complex Kids | Parent Tutorial
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