A child has a persistent fever accompanied by vomiting and diarrhea. After receiving injections and intravenous treatments, there is no improvement. Seek further treatment options.
How should you handle a child who frequently has a runny nose?
When a child has a stuffy nose and nosebleed, it may be due to dry air or dry nasal mucosa. It is recommended to consult a doctor for examination and treatment, while also drinking plenty of water, eating vegetables, and avoiding nose picking.
A child has been experiencing abdominal distension and persistent green stools for 20 days. Seek professional advice.
A child, 1 year and 5 months old, has recently been experiencing diarrhea, dry vomiting, and abdominal distension, but without a fever. This may be due to ‘food fire,’ which is caused by improper diet leading to internal heat. Dry vomiting is a sign of indigestion, a traditional Chinese medicine condition characterized by abdominal bloating, dry or smelly stools, foul flatus, sour belching, and a warm, distended abdomen. What are the solutions?
A three-year-old child is experiencing abdominal pain, diarrhea, and vomiting. What should be done?
Abdominal pain and vomiting in children may be caused by gastritis or gastroenteritis, requiring medication treatment.
When a child has a stuffy nose with yellow mucus, is not eating well, seek appropriate medication and treatment advice
The child has been coughing for 2 weeks and has thrown up after 4 days of intravenous infusion. How should the situation be handled?
The baby’s diarrhea frequency has increased, and the color is abnormal. Do you need to continue taking medicine?