Whether a child with hand, foot, and mouth disease needs hospitalization depends on the severity of the illness. Mild cases can heal on their own, while severe cases require hospital treatment.
Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease is a common viral infection in children. This article discusses whether medical assistance should be sought when symptoms such as fever and vomiting occur.
Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease is a common childhood illness. Typically, children can recover on their own within about a week, but attention must be paid to care and prevention of complications.
A child with hand, foot, and mouth disease has been experiencing repeated fever. Besides the already taken honeysuckle oral liquid, Throat Sword spray, and pediatric smoke lozenges, is additional medication treatment needed?
Discuss whether a one-year-old child with leukemia needs a bone marrow biopsy for diagnosis and treatment planning.
The child has mycoplasma infection but no fever, only cough with phlegm. They have been taking medication for 5 days, and the symptoms have improved but the phlegm remains. Consult whether to continue taking azithromycin or to go to the hospital for a mycoplasma test.
The child has mycoplasma infection and is undergoing intravenous drip treatment with rifampicin (300,000 units per bottle) 1.5 bottles. Consulted two doctors, one suggesting simultaneous oral azithromycin, the other believing no oral medication is needed. As a parent, I am unsure what to do. Please ask if oral medication is needed, when should it be taken? What should be the interval between the intravenous drip and the medication? Do I need to continue treatment for half a month? Thank you.
Discuss whether children with pneumonia necessarily require intravenous fluids, as well as treatment and care methods.
Discussing whether children with pneumonia produce phlegm and corresponding treatment methods.
Should patients with severe hand, foot, and mouth disease undergo further examinations?