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When Should Your Child with Asthma Stay Home from School?
Sometimes
it’s hard to know if a child with asthma should stay home or go
to school or daycare.
Keep in
mind every child is different, and you should talk to your
child’s health care provider about when your child needs to stay
home from school. Be
sure that your child’s Asthma Action Plan tells you what to do
if your child starts to have asthma symptoms.
Send them to school if they are in the green zone.
Think about keeping your child home if they are in the
yellow zone.
If
they:
- have a fever over
100°F
by mouth (101°F
rectally), or if they feel flushed, hot and “achy.”
- have had a
sleepless night due to asthma symptoms.
- have symptoms of a
respiratory infection, like a sore throat or productive cough,
or swollen, painful neck glands.
- appear to have
trouble breathing; cannot speak a full sentence, or are
breathing hard or fast.
- have wheezing,
coughing, shortness of breath and chest tightness which does
not improve one hour after taking quick-relief medicine.
- have a peak flow
score below 80% of their personal best even after taking their
quick-relief medicine. Parents should watch for good effort
with peak flows.
- appear weak or
tired, and are not able to perform their normal activities.
If there
is any doubt about whether to keep your child home or send him or
her to school, call your child’s doctor or asthma counselor, and
follow their advice.
If your child is in the Red zone, follow your emergency
plan.
Compiled material
from the experiences of asthma educators across the
state of Michigan, 2001, and adapted
from the Practical Guide for the Diagnosis and
Management of Asthma, NIH Publication No. 97-4053,
October 1997, National Institutes of Health, National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute |