depending on where you want to work u need good child care skills and listening skills http://www.northlan.gov.uk/your+council/facts+and+figures/education+and+training/ey+men+into+childcare.html some of the skills. you also might need cert 3 in child care tafe course.
The main qualifications needed for a play assistant are an understanding of child development and plenty of patience. Most play assistants work under the direct supervision of a more experienced person and learn their job as they go.
If it's in the best interest and safety of the child. Being a state licensed daycare provider and a certified nursing assistant does not mean she is not abusing her own child.
A. Joy Ingalls has written: 'Maternal and child health nursing' -- subject(s): Maternity nursing, Obstetrical Nursing, Pediatric nursing, Maternal-Child Nursing, Pediatric Nursing 'Study guide to accompany Maternal and child health nursing' -- subject(s): Examinations, questions, Maternity nursing, Obstetrical Nursing, Pediatric nursing, Problems
Lorraine Olszewski Walker has written: 'Parent-infant nursing science' -- subject(s): Maternity nursing, Research, Parent-Child Relations, Methods, Maternal-Child Nursing 'Strategies for theory construction in nursing' -- subject(s): Philosophy, Nursing Models, Nursing mocels, Nursing, Nursing Theory, Nursing models
Pamela J. Shapiro has written: 'Basic maternal/pediatric nursing' -- subject(s): Maternal-Child Nursing, Maternity nursing, Obstetrical Nursing, Pediatric nursing
There is a child caregiver exemption that you might be thinking of. Usually assets are turned over to nursing home/medicad but if a child has been living in the home, providing care, then that person can receive the home. Check around your community for an "elder law" attorney and get this done as soon as possible before nursing home is needed. All the best.
Barbara G. Anderson has written: 'Basic maternal/newborn nursing' -- subject(s): Maternal-Child Nursing, Maternity nursing, Obstetrical Nursing
should a medical assistant ever discipline a disruptive child in the medical office
It is when you put a nursing mother/villager in the lagoon and then that child becomes the golden child.
Janice Mighten has written: 'Children's respiratory nursing' -- subject(s): Nursing, Pediatric Nursing, Respiratory Tract Diseases, Child
As long as the nursing woman does not have any communicable diseases that might be passed along in her breast milk, there is no health concern with nursing a child that is not her own. Cross nursing or wet nursing is a historically used means of child care. Whether this is done to share the burden of child care among two or more mothers in the case of cross nursing, or a lactating woman who nurses other children for hire in the case of wet nursing, this has been common practice for generations with no ill affect.
I take you mean a father? No qualifications are necessary but you will need the following items: 1. At least one functioning testicle 2. A functioning penis 3. A willing woman of childbearing age who is capable of conceiving and bearing young. It helps if you are straight and have enough money to support the child to graduation Perhaps you mean a Physician's Assistant?