Ear Problems And Injuries, Age 11 And Younger: Home Treatment
Home Treatment
When ear discomfort or pain is mild or comes and goes (intermittent) and occurs without other symptoms, home treatment may be all that is needed to relieve your child's discomfort. Home treatment measures include the following:
- Encourage your child to swallow more often. The discomfort may be caused by a blocked eustachian tube that can occur with mild irritation in the ear canal. Let a child younger than age 12 months drink from a bottle or cup to help open the eustachian tube. A child age 2 or 3 may get the same benefit from chewing gum. Be sure to supervise your toddler when he or she chews gum.
- Some babies and children with ear pain are more comfortable in an upright position. Allow the child to rest in the position that is most comfortable.
- To relieve moderate to severe ear pain while waiting to see your doctor, or to relieve a red, swollen external ear:
- Apply heat to the ear to ease pain. Use a warm washcloth. Be careful not to burn the skin around the ear. There may be some drainage when the heat melts earwax.
- Encourage your child to rest as much as possible.
| Try a nonprescription medicine to help treat your child's fever or pain: |
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Talk to your child’s doctor before switching back and forth between doses of acetaminophen and ibuprofen to treat a fever. When you switch between two medicines, there is a chance your child will get too much medicine. |
| Be sure to follow these safety tips when you use a nonprescription medicine: |
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Symptoms to Watch For During Home Treatment
Use the Check Your Symptoms section to evaluate your child's symptoms if any of the following occur during home treatment.
- Your child's pain gets worse.
- Your child develops a fever.
- Swelling develops around the ear.
- New or different drainage from the ear develops.
- Mild intermittent pain continues after 1 week of home treatment.
- Your child's symptoms become more severe or more frequent.
| Last updated: | February 23, 2006 |
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| Author: | Sydney Youngerman-Cole, RN, BSN, RNC |
| Reviewed By: | William M. Green, MD - Emergency Medicine, Emmett Francoeur, MDCM, CSPQ, FRCPC - Pediatrics |
| Editors: | Susan Van Houten, RN, BSN, MBA, Tracy Landauer |
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