Serious question, I'm not a nurse and know nothing about how an ecg works. There could be a very valid reason why I shouldn't!
DD (2) had an ecg yesterday in A&E (not urgent, it was an outpatient request). She had a cold already and adding to the getting her clothes off and sticking wires all over she sobbed and sobbed. She'd already been poked, prodded and pricked with a needle and was well at the end of her tether. The nurse said she needed to be very still, so I suggested I fed her whilst it was done. She would have lay still and quiet across me.
Instead she was held still crying (wouldn't this affect it? I did notice she had a heart rate of 130) and when I suggested feeding her the nurse looked pretty horrified and said 'No!Now is NOT the time for that!' in a shocked tone.
WIBU? It was a purely practical suggestion of mine having assessed DD was unlikely to stop crying any other way. I haven't fed her outside the house in a year, and it's actually pretty rare I do but when she's ill it's a comfort and I amazingly seem to still make milk on demand.