Jurnal Internasional Afrika vol. 11 issue 2 2021
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Management of acute fever in children: Consensus recommendations for community and primary healthcare providers in sub-Saharan Africa

Dublin Core

Title

Jurnal Internasional Afrika vol. 11 issue 2 2021
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Management of acute fever in children: Consensus recommendations for community and primary healthcare providers in sub-Saharan Africa

Subject

Childhood
Fever
Febrile
Primary healthcare
Sub-Saharan Africa

Description

Fever is one of the most common reasons for unwell children presenting to pharmacists and primary healthcare
practitioners. Currently there are no guidelines for assessment and management of fever specifically for community
and primary healthcare workers in the sub-Saharan Africa region. This multidisciplinary consensus guide
was developed to assist pharmacists and primary healthcare workers in sub-Saharan Africa to risk stratify and
manage children who present with fever, decide when to refer, and how to advise parents and caregivers.
Fever is defined as body temperature ≥ 37.5 ◦C and is a normal physiological response to illness that facilitates
and accelerates recovery. Although it is often associated with self-limiting illness, it causes significant concern to
both parents and attending healthcare workers. Clinical signs may be used by pharmacy staff and primary
healthcare workers to determine level of distress and to distinguish between a child with fever who is at high risk
of serious illness and who requires specific treatment, hospitalisation or specialist care, and those at low risk who
could be managed conservatively at home. In children with warning signs, serious causes of fever that may need
to be excluded include infections (including malaria), non-infective inflammatory conditions and malignancy.
Simple febrile convulsions are not in themselves harmful, and are not necessarily indicative of serious infection.
In the absence of illness requiring specific treatment, relief from distress is the primary indication for prescribing
pharmacotherapy, and antipyretics should not be administered with the sole intention of reducing body temperature.
Care must be taken not to overdose medications and clear instructions should be given to parents/
caregivers on managing the child at home and when to seek further medical care.

Creator

Robin Green , David Webb , Prakash Mohan Jeena , Mike Wells , Nadia Butt , Jimmy Mapenzi Hangoma , Rajatheran (Sham) Moodley , Jackie Maimin , Margreet Wibbelink , Fatima Mustafa

Source

www.elsevier.com/locate/afjem

Publisher

ELSAVIER

Date

15 November 2020

Contributor

PERI IRAWAN

Format

PDF

Language

ENGLISH

Type

TEXT

Files

Tags

,Repository, Repository Horizon University Indonesia, Repository Universitas Horizon Indonesia, Horizon.ac.id, Horizon University Indonesia, Universitas Horizon Indonesia, HorizonU, Repo Horizon ,

Citation

Robin Green , David Webb , Prakash Mohan Jeena , Mike Wells , Nadia Butt , Jimmy Mapenzi Hangoma , Rajatheran (Sham) Moodley , Jackie Maimin , Margreet Wibbelink , Fatima Mustafa , “Jurnal Internasional Afrika vol. 11 issue 2 2021
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Management of acute fever in children: Consensus recommendations for community and primary healthcare providers in sub-Saharan Africa,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed November 21, 2024, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2628.