Home Care for Fevers
The 3 goals of home care for a child with a fever are to reduce the
temperature, prevent dehydration, and monitor for serious or life-threatening
illness.
The first goal is to make the child comfortable by monitoring and reducing
the fever to under 102F (38.9C). This is done using a thermometer and
medications and dressing the child appropriately. A warm water bath can also be
helpful.
- To check your child's temperature, you will need a thermometer.
Thermometers available are glass mercury, digital, and tympanic (used in the
ear).
- Stay away from tympanic thermometers, the jury is still out about their
accuracy.
- Glass thermometers work well but may break and take several minutes
to get a reading.
- Digital thermometers are inexpensive and obtain a reading in
seconds.
- It is best to check an infant's or toddler's temperature rectally.
- Hold the child chest down across your knees.
- Spread the buttocks with one hand and insert the thermometer
lubricated with a water-soluble jelly about 1 inch into the rectum with
the other hand.
- Oral temperatures may be obtained in older children who are not mouth
breathing or have not recently had a hot or cold beverage.
- Acetaminophen (Children's Tylenol, Tempra) and ibuprofen (Children's
Advil, Children's Motrin) are used to reduce fever.
- Follow the dosage and frequency printed on the label.
- Remember to continue to give the medication over at least 24 hours
or the fever will usually return.
- Do not use aspirin to treat fever in children, especially for a
fever with chickenpox. It has been linked to Reye's syndrome which
causes liver failure. Ibuprofen use in chickenpox is also being
questioned.
- Children should not be overdressed indoors, even in the winter.
- Overdressing keeps the body from cooling using evaporation,
radiation, conduction, or convection.
- Most practical is to dress the child in a single layer of clothing
and cover the child with a sheet or light blanket.
- A sponge bath in warm water will help reduce a fever.
- This is usually not needed but may more quickly reduce the fever.
- Put the child in a few inches of warm water and use a sponge or
washcloth to wet the skin of the body and arms and legs.
- The water itself does not cool the child. The evaporation of the
water off the skin does, so do not cover the child with wet towels.
- Contrary to the popular folk remedy to reduce fever, under no
circumstances should rubbing alcohol be used in a bath or rubbed on the
skin. Alcohol is poisonous to children.
The second goal is to keep the child from becoming dehydrated. Humans lose
extra water from the skin and lungs during a fever.
- Encourage the child to drink clear fluids such as non-carbonated drinks
without caffeine or juice (not water). Water does not contain the necessary
electrolytes and glucose. Other clear fluids are chicken soup, Pedialyte,
and other rehydrating drinks available at your grocery or drug store.
- Tea or other caffeine-containing products should not be used. They act
as diurectics and increase urination and fluid loss. This is not the effect
you want.
- Your child should urinate light-colored urine at least every 4 hours if
well hydrated.
The third goal is to monitor the child for signs of serious or
life-threatening illness.
- A good strategy is to reduce the child's temperature to under 102F
(39.0C).
- Also, make sure the child is drinking enough clear fluids (not water).
- If both these conditions are met and your child is still ill appearing,
a more serious problem may exist.
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