"One more bend and I'll spit!"
Oh, you wonderful holiday season. If only there wasn't one thing ... because all too often: holiday time is travel time - is time for spit-up car seats. This unpleasant phenomenon is called kinetosis or simply: travel sickness.
Many people know it from their own painful experience: whether you're travelling by car, bus, train or boat - travelling can make your stomach churn. Children in particular often get really sick on journeys, some to the point of vomiting. Travel sickness is typically experienced by children between the ages of two and twelve, before that it is rather rare.
It is not known with absolute certainty how travel sickness occurs, but it is assumed that some people are simply particularly sensitive when it comes to analysing the information received by their eyes, vestibular system and vibratory organs. If these sensory impressions do not match, nausea occurs. For example, the eye reports "We are moving!", but the vestibular organ says "We are sitting still!". This contradiction probably leads to nausea.
What can you do? Well, a spit-up bag should always be on board. It is helpful to look out for early signs: Many children start yawning or just get a bit funny when it starts. It is also good if a child who is prone to motion sickness can look out of the front window, i.e. sit in the centre back of the car or in the passenger seat if they are big enough.
Medicinally, you can try Nux-Vomica globules if you like. Vomex juice can also be used, it works well, but you should bear in mind that it also makes you quite tired.
A tip from a colleague who specialises in kinesiology: a newspaper folded several times between your T-shirt and jacket reduces vibrations and therefore also nausea. It may sound strange, but it doesn't hurt and is worth a try if in doubt.
Last but not least: Drive decently and don't speed through the bends like crazy. Children don't tolerate this very well.
Further interesting tips
U4 provision
Screenings are a recurring topic for parents. The U4 check-up is about growth, motor skills, nutrition and hearing.
Ticks
My conclusion after almost 15 years as a paediatrician in private practice: tick-borne diseases are probably the most overestimated health risk - at least from the parents' point of view.
Change of perspective
Raising children is a complex and difficult task in which perfectionism is not a good companion. Be lenient - with yourself and with the child.