Quote from: CMdeux on September 01, 2014, 10:51:05 AM
I think that the problem here, is that there is a fundamental confusion regarding permission to self-administer, and the expectation of sole responsibility for doing so.
The latter may NEVER be an entirely realistic scenario for some individuals, quite frankly, and there is definitely no bright line which smoothly demarcates the transition between no expectation of self-administration, and expectation of sole responsibility. I'd consider this one of the most difficult things to explain to others, in fact-- that a ten year old may well know HOW to self-administer, but probably cannot be relied upon to do so under the conditions that anaphylaxis presents. Maybe so, and maybe not. KWIM? For individual children, this state of affairs may be a transition that lasts a decade or more.
Quote from: Macabre on September 02, 2014, 07:23:59 AM
We never sought "permission" from a doctor. DS self-carried in fourth grade. He should have done it sooner. He list the Epi bag that he carried from class to class a few times. Given his personality, we should have strapped it to him in first grade.
When I gave myself an Epi when he was in second grade, I wanted him there to watch (and I had him doubt for me).
I probably expected him to self administer sometime in Middle School.
Quote from: LinksEtc on September 01, 2014, 09:14:38 AM
How old were your kids when they got the ok to self-administer?
Quote from: CMdeux on June 23, 2014, 05:26:13 PM
our local district tied self-carry to self-administer. DD has never confused those two things in her own mind, btw, and I credit early self-carrying for that distinction.