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The most common cause of seizure between tha ages of six months to six years is febrile seizure. If the child did not have fever at that time other causes have to be considered. The child needs to be examined without delay.
you should say ''i will call child helpline if you do''
Because he is epileptic and goes to the bathroom to have the seizure.
Sometimes this happens for various reasons. If it's only a single seizure and doesn't occur again, things might be OK. However, if it happens a second time, call your vet.
NO, its the child's decision, I call my mums boyfriend dad all the time.
The period of time after the seizure has ended. POST (after), ICTAL (seizure). Can last anywhere from minutes to days.
You would call this person a child. By the time a child reaches puberty, he or she knows.
The proper time to pick a child up from a sleepover is whenever is convenient for the parents hosting your child at the sleepover. Every family is different, there is no certain time that works for every sleepover. If they don't really care what time, go with whenever is convenient for you.
Depends how long the time span is that you agreed to. Try to call the other person or drive over to where the child is suppose to be. If there is no child, call the police.
We'll your child needs anger every time. They might hate you couse you don't let them outside or you shout at him every time and that how your child get's nervous. (try to play with him) a idea to get your child happy
The parents do have the right not to send the child to school on health grounds. They also have the option just to send the child part-time (e.g mornings but not afternoons). Potentially, (depending on local authorities) they have the right to paid home tutoring for their child. However, if the child is sent to school (for any length of time), the school should have the full (necessary) details of the child's medical condition, along with an action plan should a seizure occur. This plan should be arranged by organising a meeting with the parents (and potentially the child, depending on the child's age), in order to discuss the concerns of all parties. It helps if the parents have a clear idea of what they would like to be done to help their child; bring along a "checklist" of what should be done/who to call should their child have a seizure at school. The school should be prepared to give the child any necessary medication or first aid. If there is a school nurse, she should be made aware of the child's condition.
The noise it makes every time you get a call You have to pay for call Different time zones not a clear signal Unknown person can call you They can interrogate you