Archive for January, 2010

Breastfeeding for 6 months or more may reduce issues, study suggests

Posted on Thursday, January 28th, 2010 at 6:01 pm

The debate about when a child is “too old” to be breastfed is always an interesting one. A new study in Australia proves that breastfeeding your baby for more than 6 months has long term benefits including a stronger mother-child bond and having a greater mental health long term. Breastfeeding supposedly also helps babies deal with stress better.

At the end of the day, how long a mother chooses to breastfeed is entirely her decision and what she feels most comfortable with. We just like to share interesting articles like this with you.

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Click on Icon to Read Full Article

Don’t forget about THE HELP COMPANY CLUB

Posted on Thursday, January 28th, 2010 at 3:43 pm

logoIf you’re not looking for full-time help, The Help Company Club gives you
unlimited access to our skilled and professional candidates on an on-call
basis. A membership will provide you with nannies, housekeepers, chefs,
chauffeurs, gardeners, security personnel, assistants on an hourly basis,
eldercare, butlers, party help, and pet care. Whether you are planning a date
night out, need a last minute housekeeper, chef for a romantic dinner, or
someone to fill in while your permanent help is out, be rest assured that The
Help Company can help you with your needs.

Here’s How it Works:
• Annual Membership Fee of $300, payable via credit card.
• A client can contact The Help Co during our regualr office hours, 9-5pm.
• There is a non refundable booking fee billed for all on-call requests. Fee
structure varies depending of type service. Please call us for more details.
• Clients agree to pay the candidate according to their hourly rate, which
includes a 4 hour minimum. Overtime rates apply on most major holidays.

Our Candidates:
• Are subject to a meticulous interview process to verify work history, salary,
quality of work, and integrity.
• Arrive 15 minutes before their scheduled start time to sit down with you
and go over any necessary information/guidelines for your household.

Please call us to join the club or if you have any questions.
310-828-4111
claudia@thehelpcompany.com

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Rain Rain Go Away, Come Again another Day!

Posted on Wednesday, January 20th, 2010 at 4:09 pm

RAINY DAY ACTIVITIES


rainyday

In LA, when it rains, the city seems to shut down. Here are just a few ideas to entertain the kids until the sun comes out.

Activities for All Ages:

Arts and Crafts

  • Since you know your children the best, we suggest Googling Arts and Craft Projects with keywords of what they like to do. Some keyword suggestions would be: paint, draw, clay, play doh, paper mache & collage.

Put on a Show

  • Get together a group of kids (or just you and your kid!) to stage a play or talent show. They may need help getting started, so jump start them with opening lines such as : “Once upon a time”, “in a land far far away”, etc.

Some Activities for Older Kids:

Reverse Writing

  • Challenge your older child, with a pencil and paper.  See is they can write a sentence backwards, without looking in the mirror. Can they write you a secret message ?

Change of Appearance

  • Have your child observe you for a minute. Leave the room, and then return to the room, having changed a small detail in your appearance (put on some lipstick or change your hair, remove a scarf or put on glasses, etc.) Did they notice your Change Of Appearance?

If you want to, and don’t mind the clean up involved– GET WET ANYWAY! Bundle up, put on rain boots, slickers, grab umbrellas and playfully splash around in the puddles. When you’re done, come back in, sit by a fire, drink hot coca, or take a warm bath.

Valentine’s Day is Less Than a Month Away!

Posted on Wednesday, January 20th, 2010 at 12:52 pm

Don’t forget to book your Valentine’s Day Private Chef.

Opt out of the tasteless Pri-Fixe, overpriced menus at restaurants this Valentine’s Day and book one of our fabulous private chefs. Our private chefs can make a personalized menu of your favorite dishes (including multiple course tasting menus if desired) in the most intimate of settings- your own home. The chefs can set the table along with flowers and candles to your liking.

The Help Company also has experienced and professional servers who can make this night truly something special.

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Chef’s fees range between $250-$500 plus the cost of food. Special Rates Apply to Help Company Club Members.

Get Kids Involved in Helping Haiti

Posted on Tuesday, January 19th, 2010 at 5:59 pm

haiti

The earthquake in Haiti has been catastrophic. More than three million people have been affected, and estimates are that over 50,000 have died.

The easiest way to donate is probably to text “HAITI” to 90999 to donate $10 to the Red Cross. There are other reputable nonprofits that are already providing relief to Haiti such as: Doctors Without Borders, UNICEF, and The Salvation Army.

We think this is a great opportunity to get the children involved and make them aware of this global crisis.

Here are a few fun ways to get children involved in raising money for this cause:

JUMP-A-THON

  • Form a jump-a-thon to raise money for Haiti earthquake victims. Invite the children’s friends and neighbors over to join in. Have adults and local businesses pledge money per hop, and donate the earnings. The children hop for one minute, with the adult timing the minute.

BAKE SALE

  • Pretty basic and self explanatory. You will need to ask parents and caregivers help children make baked goods and then buy them. All money generated should be donated.

DROP YOUR CHANGE

  • These donation boxes are common in markets and stores. You can extend this to school, church, college, and office canteens. Advertise with the school or organization telling children, parents, and caregivers to bring in their spare change to donate to Haiti earthquake relief.

We welcome any other suggestions! These are just a few things we thought that could be fun for everyone while benefiting a good cause.

Did you know that you can get Tax Breaks for Hiring Household Help?

Posted on Monday, January 18th, 2010 at 12:08 pm

Believe it or not, you can receive a Tax Break for hiring in home childcare if someone in your household donates time to a nonprofit organization. You would need to deduct whatever you pay your nanny from your 1040 form. Tax breaks average between $400-$1660, but in these times, every penny counts!

Hiring Nannies can give you Tax Breaks!

Hiring Nannies can give you Tax Breaks!

Nannies who get flu shots may have an edge in the job market

Posted on Tuesday, January 12th, 2010 at 11:57 am

The Help Company’s owner Claudia Kahn gave great insight into the pros and cons of  having nannies get the H1N1 flu vaccine. Read below to hear her insight on both the parents and nannies sides to the more frequent requests for caregivers to be vaccinated.

FLU

Click on the image to go to the LA Times Article

“Nannies who get flu shots may have an edge in the job market.

Many refuse — some out of fear — and that can cause a rift between caregivers and the families that employ them.

About three months ago, Samantha Slattery approached her nanny about getting the H1N1 flu vaccine. Slattery, 33, of Topanga, had a 5-month-old daughter and 2-year-old son. The baby was too little to be vaccinated, and Slattery wanted to avoid vaccinating her son.

But nanny Blanca Duarte refused. Duarte, 47, said she was afraid the vaccine would make her sick; she had gotten ill after a flu vaccination years before.

“For three weeks I could not work,” Duarte said. “After that, I said no more.”

She also worried about side effects. She said her teenage daughter had heard rumors at Crenshaw High that the vaccine makes you sterile. And she said her family doctor did not even have the vaccine in stock.

For many parents and caregivers, reaching agreement about flu vaccines has proved impossible, even amid initial fears that the H1N1 pandemic could prove more dangerous than seasonal flu.

New parents are particularly concerned, because babies younger than 6 months — too young for vaccination — are considered among those most at risk for serious complications.

This month is a peak hiring season for nannies nationwide as families return from holiday vacations and new mothers go back to work, according to officials from major nanny placement agencies.

Some nannies are trying to get an edge in the tough economy by advertising themselves as having received the H1N1 vaccine. But many others refuse vaccinations, parents and doctors say, because they are concerned about rumored side effects or unable to get access to the vaccine because of shortages.

In recent weeks, online message boards have filled as parents struggle to persuade nannies to be vaccinated, fire nannies who refuse and screen new applicants.

“Ugh! I am so frustrated right now that I could explode,” the mother of a premature baby girl wrote on Babycentercommunity.com. “I have been interviewing potential nannies for the past several weeks. I finally found one that I was feeling confident that I would like to hire, I called to get more info for reference check and also I had forgot to ask if they were OK with getting both flu and swine vaccine this year. The response was no.”

“I can’t make her do it,” another parent wrote on Urbanbaby.com. “I offered to pay. If she doesn’t want to, she doesn’t want to.”

Mothers in West Los Angeles and New York City are calling agencies to ask how to broach the subject of vaccination with their nannies, said Claudia Kahn, owner and founder of the Help Company in Santa Monica, which serves families in both Los Angeles and New York.

“It’s a very touchy discussion, to ask people to get vaccinated,” Kahn said. “There’s a fine line about medical things, and people are questioning whether they’re allowed to ask, if it’s prying into their health background.”

Slattery, a music event coordinator, had heard about other families requiring nannies to get vaccinated and show proof. Instead, Slattery was vaccinated, as were her son and her husband, a visual effects supervisor for movies that have included “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.”

“I didn’t want to force my nanny,” Slattery said. “It’s a personal choice. I wasn’t going to get heavy-handed about it.”

Relationships between mothers and nannies can be fraught with unspoken tension about terms of employment and parenting, said Lindsay Heller, a psychologist and former nanny.

Heller mediates between nannies and parents at her Beverly Hills consulting business, the Nanny Doctor.

The H1N1 flu scare exposed rifts in some families, she said, if the “power of privilege” initially allowed parents to get the vaccine through their doctors while many nannies had a harder time finding it for their families.

In other cases, Heller said, she heard from nannies who said they worried vaccines could make them sick or lead to autism in their children.

At QueensCare Family Clinic in Hollywood, many patients ask Dr. Guillermo Diaz whether he and his children have been vaccinated. The pediatrician and father of two tells them his family members are all vaccinated — as is his nanny.

Diaz said that about half of his Latino patients have refused the vaccine but that the other half “are proponents.”

“I don’t think it’s a matter of culture so much as whether they are believing the rumors and bad reports,” Diaz said. “Nannies have networks and speak among them, so if one nanny says no and it spreads, then it’s all over.”

California legal experts say they have been fielding calls from anxious parents and agencies dealing with reluctant nannies.

“What I’m hearing from families is there does seem to be some push-back from nannies about getting the shot,” said Bob King, lawyer and founder of Irvine-based Legally Nanny, which provides legal advice to families and nanny agencies. “It’s largely driven by fear from the nannies.”

Although it is a violation of federal antidiscrimination law for agencies to screen nannies based on their medical histories, including vaccinations, it is not illegal for parents to screen or fire nannies for refusing to get vaccinated, King said.

California and Los Angeles County health officials do not mandate or monitor whether nannies, baby-sitters or day-care providers get vaccinated for H1N1 flu, although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that caregivers of babies younger than 6 months old be inoculated.

Kahn, who has been in the nanny business for 28 years, said she assures mothers that they can ask nannies to get vaccinated, and she said most mothers succeed.

“Most of them have a pretty close relationship with their nanny,” she said.

Some parents have paid for nannies’ shots, driven them to their own doctor’s offices or given them paid time off to get vaccinated, Kahn said.

“It’s all about respect,” Kahn said. “You want to keep your employees happy.”

Molly Morales, 34, took nanny Delila Morales, no relation, with her to a county-sponsored H1N1 flu vaccination clinic in Santa Clarita last month. They camped out in line with her 2-month-old son Hayden and 3-year-old daughter Bailey.

“She was fine with it,” said Morales, a marketing director, as the nanny nodded. “Just to keep everybody healthy in the house.”

When people in the household do fall ill, new concerns arise.

“The kids are getting sick, so it’s like what do you do with your nanny, do you expose her? That’s the dilemma,” Kahn said.

Kahn has witnessed a range of behavior from parents. She said one family did not get vaccinated or ask their nanny to do so, only to have their baby get the flu during a vacation. Kahn said the nanny, who eventually caught the flu too, had to stay with the ill child while the parents continued their trip.

But another client, whom Kahn described as a high-ranking television executive, gave her nanny time off when her 5-year-old daughter got the flu rather than expose the nanny to the virus. Instead the mother stayed home to care for her daughter, who ended up needing to be hospitalized before recovering.

In some cases, parents and nannies end up in agreement.

Before this fall, Glendale nanny Esther Avalos had never gotten a flu vaccine, and she did not plan to do so this fall. Then her employer explained the danger of catching the virus.

“I realized I’m putting my kids and my work kids at risk,” said Avalos, 33, who later got herself and her two young daughters vaccinated for seasonal flu and accompanied her employer’s children to a county-sponsored H1N1 flu clinic. “For my boss, it’s real important. She educated me.”