http://www.mercola.com/2002/feb/20/fever_treatment.htm
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Most
Parents Clueless on How to Treat Fevers in Kids
A survey comparing attitudes of doctors,
nurses and parents towards treating fevers in children reveals that parents
tend to treat high temperatures much more aggressively than health
professionals do. A low fever can actually benefit a sick
child, and the researchers attributed parental tendencies to "fever
phobia" -- a fear that fever is harmful -- which they say originated
after the introduction of anti-fever drugs like Tylenol. A group of Israeli researchers obtained
their results from a questionnaire sent to more than 2,000 parents, doctors
and nurses regarding fevers in children older than 3 months. The researchers
defined fever as 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit above normal body temperature, which
is around 98.6 degrees. The survey included questions on risks of fever,
dosages of anti-fever drugs and when children should be treated. The investigators found that only 43% of parents
knew that a fever below 100.4 degrees can be beneficial to a child, in contrast to 86% of the doctors and 64% of the
nurses who responded to the survey. The majority of parents also said they
would treat a fever below 100.4 even if the child has no other symptoms,
something with which only 11% of doctors agreed. A fever can actually help sick children.
The body basically, is trying to do the right thing. Bugs like to live at
body temperature. So if you raise the temperature, you kill them off. And
contrary to what parents may believe the body can function very efficiently
at temperatures as high as 100.5 degrees. While seizures from fevers are scary for
parents, a previous study showed febrile seizures caused no long-term
neurological damage. In contrast, fever-related seizures only occur at very high
temperatures -- around 108 degrees. In the case of fever-related seizures,
parents should be more concerned that meningitis or bacteria in the blood may
be causing the seizure than the child's fever. Patient
Education and Counseling January 2002;46:61-65 DR. MERCOLA'S
COMMENT: A fever is a backup defense mechanism
when our primary ones fail. Good food, adequate rest and the ability to
handle stresses are the primary ones. Please read one of the most
comprehensive articles
to date that I have reviewed on this important topic. Many families with
young children will want to print this article out or bookmark it so you can
have it to refer to in the future. It has all the necessary information you
need to know on how to address this common problem that is typically
mismanaged. However, it is absolutely amazing how
infrequently your children will get sick when they are following the diet
program. We all know that it is far easier to prevent an illness than to
treat it. I would also advise avoiding most all
of the anti-fever medications unless your child is absolutely miserable or
the fever is over 105. Related
Articles: Fever in Children - A
Blessing in Disguise Anti-Fever Drugs May
Prolong Flu Sponging and
Fans Do Not Bring Fever Down Seizures From Fevers
Don't Cause Brain Injury Parents Still Don't
Understand the Truth About Fevers |
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