Providing support for the children during procedures can also mean that the nurses have to represent the child: Sometimes you have to take the child's part and strengthen them … ‘It doesn't hurt’ as some parents say. I usually say ‘it does’ … Never try to fool the child and say that they won't be feeling anything. The nurses are also the children's representatives when contact with the physicians is concerned. The nurses thus ensure, among other things, that all ordinations have been prescribed so the children will not be exposed to a needle prick twice that day, or as described by a nurse like this: Then you have to be the voice of the child’ quite simply. There are doctors who prescribe lots of tests. What in the world, we can't just take that amount of blood. Nurses specify that physicians are rarely present at NRMP and therefore do not see if the children have a difficult time: We often tell doctors that it is hard with needle sticks …. That you can't, wait several months and the child will suffer … Because we, who are nurses, most often see immediately the need for a port á cart.