For babies, there are baby nose vacuum cleaners (aspirators). They don’t have the problem you describe. But they are impractical to take with you. The hand-powered ones don’t really work well (speaking from personal experience, as a parent), and the vacuum-cleaner-powered ones would require the vacuum cleaner.
A completely different approach would be having many public places where one can wash their hands. Perhaps with free disposable tissues. (Possible counter-argument: ecological footprint.)
It’s the same with babies. We bought some; we threw them away. (The cleaners, not the babies.)
The vacuum ones are loud and will scare the baby for the first time, but they work like magic. Also, they are surprisingly easy to clean. But of course, impractical to take outside.
I can only give you a generalization from one example. I wouldn’t buy that, because when my kids are sick, they stay at home, or only go out shortly; so this doesn’t solve a problem I would perceive to have.
Also, maybe a better solution already exist, I just didn’t do a proper research.
I actually imagine that the hand-powered cleaners could be improved, to make them useful. Either increase the part you compress, or add one-way valves so that you could quickly press it repeatedly. Though at some moment they would become inconveniently big. But I assume the cordless vacuum also is kinda big.
So it’s a question of how big and inconvenient device are you willing to buy to solve a problem that happens rarely (that you need to take the sick kids outside for a long walk).
For babies, there are baby nose vacuum cleaners (aspirators). They don’t have the problem you describe. But they are impractical to take with you. The hand-powered ones don’t really work well (speaking from personal experience, as a parent), and the vacuum-cleaner-powered ones would require the vacuum cleaner.
A completely different approach would be having many public places where one can wash their hands. Perhaps with free disposable tissues. (Possible counter-argument: ecological footprint.)
I did use one of the small hand-powered one designed for babies for myself and it didn’t seem to remove enough mucus.
It’s the same with babies. We bought some; we threw them away. (The cleaners, not the babies.)
The vacuum ones are loud and will scare the baby for the first time, but they work like magic. Also, they are surprisingly easy to clean. But of course, impractical to take outside.
Do you think there would be a market for vacuum one’s for babies that are cordless and designed to be taken outside, if someone would produce them?
I can only give you a generalization from one example. I wouldn’t buy that, because when my kids are sick, they stay at home, or only go out shortly; so this doesn’t solve a problem I would perceive to have.
Also, maybe a better solution already exist, I just didn’t do a proper research.
I actually imagine that the hand-powered cleaners could be improved, to make them useful. Either increase the part you compress, or add one-way valves so that you could quickly press it repeatedly. Though at some moment they would become inconveniently big. But I assume the cordless vacuum also is kinda big.
So it’s a question of how big and inconvenient device are you willing to buy to solve a problem that happens rarely (that you need to take the sick kids outside for a long walk).
I recently got a (regular household) handheld vacuum that worked surprisingly well. Are the mucus ones you’re using cordless?
When kids are sick, I usually don’t spend a long time with them outside, so this is not a problem for me.
It’s usually the adults who often need to be mobile even when sick. Personally, I am okay with the tissues.