We live in a culture where every phone is a camera and where many people do like to document the minutiae of their daily lives on social media: my adult kids and older grandchildren do this and post trivia - 'here's a pic of the cake I made earlier' (or similarly earth-shattering events). This picture seems very much an example of that use of social media, and some people clearly use it to record more than just trivia and where it involves family life and isn't exploitative then I can't see the problem.
Why some people like to produce a running commentary of their lives (with pics, 'warts and all') on social media beats me - but perhaps that is just a generational thing on my part.
I must be in the wrong generation then - I'm in my mid forties but I don't get why someone would post such intimate pictures for general public consumption (unless there was no way of identifying the family). It is a touching photo but if the parents posted it onto social media in a way whereby they can be identified IMO it just seems attention-seeking or narcissistic and becomes as vacuous as the thousands of pouting selfies and all the other dross posted on public social media that people want attention for.
Taking care of a sick child is nothing exceptional and my daughters as babies were held in their father's arms while he showered as a quick way to wash them at the same time - it was very sweet for us as parents - but if someone wants to share an intimate, family moment with the public in a way where the family can be identified, the sweetness for me is tainted by the person saying "look at us, look at us". There are probably loads of parents doing this without posting pictures of it in public so it's posting the picture that seems warped to me.
I can understand posting shocking pictures of teenagers in hospital in intensive care after taking drugs - there is a serious message to get across as a warning to other teenagers who might be thinking of trying something at a party without knowing what exactly is in it.
I avoided the whole Facebook thing with my 16 year old - she wasn't allowed it and by the time I vaguely thought about relenting about a year ago, she'd lost interest. Her fairly basic smart phone (present from a grandparent) recently stopped working so she is now part of a small minority of people navigating life without a mobile phone. Perfect timing since she is currently doing her iGCSE exams.