Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think that a 14 year old boy does not need to see a paediatrician for a jab?

57 replies

BonsoirAnna · 06/05/2009 19:45

Bloody hell. DSS1's mother took him to the family paediatrician for a routine jab. Said paediatrician asked DSS1 how much pocket money he got - and, on hearing the reply, said that it was 1/4 of the amount a boy of his age should be getting. DSS1 got very upset because he felt patronised - but he shouldn't have been there in the first place!

OP posts:
morningpaper · 06/05/2009 19:46

yanbu

noddyholder · 06/05/2009 19:46

His own mum prob knows best for him.

scienceteacher · 06/05/2009 19:49

When we lived in the USA, our children went to a paediatrician for their jabs (or rather for a routine check up and then to the nurse for jabs, as instructed by the doctor).

Paediatricians work with those who are under 18, so it is not unreasonable for a 14 year old to see a paediatrician. If he had to be hospitalised, no doubt he would go to children's ward (albeit a teen section of it).

Don't understand the bit about pocket money, but perhaps it was more than a vaccination visit in the eyes of the doctor. In the US, these visits were known as WCC - well child checks, and nearly always resulted in vaccinations.

BonsoirAnna · 06/05/2009 19:49

Oh she definitely doesn't!

OP posts:
BonsoirAnna · 06/05/2009 19:51

No, it was just a vaccination visit. Very odd for a child to see a paediatrician once they have entered adolescence here. No adolescent girl would countenance this particularly condescending elderly man. The thought!

OP posts:
MillyR · 06/05/2009 19:52

My children have never been given a jab by a doctor; it is always done by a nurse.

YouLukaAmazing · 06/05/2009 19:56

Message withdrawn

mylifemykids · 06/05/2009 19:59

Is he under paediatric care for special needs?

BonsoirAnna · 06/05/2009 19:59

Not at all! He goes to the paediatrician but by now ought to have graduated to the GP.

OP posts:
flowerybeanbag · 06/05/2009 20:00

Do they have GP-type doctors in France Anna?

sarah293 · 06/05/2009 20:00

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn

flowerybeanbag · 06/05/2009 20:00

x-posts!

NotPlayingAnyMore · 06/05/2009 20:01

"Said paediatrician asked DSS1 how much pocket money he got - and, on hearing the reply, said that it was 1/4 of the amount a boy of his age should be getting."

Well unfortunately, not everyone can provide as much pocket money as a paediatrician's wages can stretch to!

Greensneeze · 06/05/2009 20:01

What's it to you?

scienceteacher · 06/05/2009 20:02

Did the medical system force him to go to a paed rather than a GP? If he was expected to go to a GP, why didn't he?

If it was parental choice to go the paed, then why be surprised that they treated him like a child?

SoupDragon · 06/05/2009 20:02

What does it matter?

BonsoirAnna · 06/05/2009 20:03

Because DSS1 is super upset about the pocket money thing and it has caused lots of tears and upset, that's why!

OP posts:
Greensneeze · 06/05/2009 20:03
Takver · 06/05/2009 20:03

MIght he have had bad reactions in the past that you don't know about?

I have had great trouble getting anyone to give me vaccinations - didn't have any of the routine ones at school because I was too bad a risk, and as a teenager had to go to somewhere with resuscitation equipment for jabs before travelling.

cory · 06/05/2009 20:04

I don't understand why he'd need a paediatrician for a routine jab; practice nurse should do for that surely.

otoh, if there had been a more serious/specialised problem there wouldn't be anything wrong with a 14yo seeing a consultant paediatrician rather than another consultant imo

dd sees a GP for routine stuff but a paediatrician for stuff related to her chronic condition, which is totally out of the GPs area of expertise

BonsoirAnna · 06/05/2009 20:04

Yes, you have to be signed up to a GP (médecin traitant) to be properly reimbursed by SS.

OP posts:
BonsoirAnna · 06/05/2009 20:05

Nurses don't do jabs in France - doctors do.

OP posts:
SoupDragon · 06/05/2009 20:05

But that has nothing to do with the fact that he saw a paediatrician and everything to do with the fact that the man happened to make a silly remark.

SoupDragon · 06/05/2009 20:07

I know you think his mother is a stupid bint but you really can't blame the paediatrician's conversational skills on her.

TotalChaos · 06/05/2009 20:08

haven't got a clue whether yanbu or not seeing as I don't know how the french system works for teens.