Baby Pink Was Infected By A Strong Illness

Baby Pink Was Infected By A Strong Illness
Baby Pink Was Infected By A Strong Illness

Video: Baby Pink Was Infected By A Strong Illness

Video: Baby Pink Was Infected By A Strong Illness
Video: Health and Ilnesses Conversation 2024, May
Anonim

Pink went on tour with her husband and children, Jameson and Willow, but that doesn't stop her from having a normal life and showing the less glamorous things about her family's life from hotel to hotel.

The husband of the singer of "Just Like Fire", the motocross athlete Carey Hart, shared with his followers, through an image on Instagram, that the youngest of the family, Jameson Moon, 20 months old, was affected by hand, foot and mouth disease.

Want to know how glamorous a tour can be? Jameson has [the disease] of the hands, feet, and mouth; and Willow has a temperature of 102 degrees. Both boys went to bed and Mom Pink still has to keep doing shows,”Hart, 43, captioned in a couple of photos: the first of Jameson covered in a rash and the second of Willow in the bathtub, as her father leans back on the edge of the tub with his head on a towel.

The athlete has not only had to deal with the health of his children, but also with the criticism of others since seeing the little one with the outbreaks creates a wrong concept of hand, foot and mouth disease.

“As a mother of 3 children whose children have had MPB multiple times, I say she made a mistake. MPB is very contagious and it is not fair to knowingly expose others. … I don't think it's fair to judge the other patron. She was probably also concerned about her own safety and probably concerned about your son."

Although Hart responded indignantly to some of the comments, Pink, for his part, only shared photos of his family writing "life on tour."

What is coxsackie disease or hand, foot, and mouth syndrome?

The Coxsackie A16 virus is generally the most common cause of hand, foot, and mouth disease in the United States, but there are other Coxsackie viruses that can cause it. In outbreaks of hand, foot, and mouth disease, several types of enteroviruses can be identified, but most of the time, only one or two enteroviruses are identified.

“Hand, foot, and mouth disease is generally contagious during the first week the person is sick. Sometimes, it can continue to be contagious for several days or weeks after the symptoms have disappeared,”according to the website of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Recommended: