When To Call a Doctor
Call your health
professional immediately if:
- Your child has a severe injury to the
ear.
- Your child has sudden hearing loss, severe pain, or
dizziness.
- Your child seems to be very sick with symptoms such as a
high fever and stiff neck.
- You notice redness, swelling, or pain
behind or around your child's ear, especially if your child does not move the
muscles on that side of his or her face.
Call your health professional if:
- You can't quiet your child who has a severe
earache with home treatment over several hours.
- Your baby pulls or
rubs his or her ear and appears to be in pain (crying,
screaming).
- Your child's ear pain increases even with
treatment.
- Your child has a fever over
102°F (38.89°C) with other
signs of ear infection.
- You suspect that your child's eardrum has
burst, or fluid that looks like pus or blood is draining from the
ear.
- Your child has an object stuck in his or her
ear.
- Your child with an ear infection continues to have symptoms
(fever and pain) after 48 hours of treatment with an
antibiotic.
- Your child with an ear tube
develops an earache or has drainage from his or her ear.
Watchful Waiting
Watchful waiting is when you and your health
professional watch symptoms to see if the health problem improves on its own.
If it does, no treatment is necessary. If the symptoms don't get better or get
worse, then it’s time to take the next treatment step.
If your
child is age 6 months or older and has a mild earache, you might try watchful
waiting. Most ear infections get better without antibiotics. However, if your
child's pain doesn't get better with nonprescription children's pain reliever
(such as acetaminophen) or the symptoms continue after 48 hours, call a health
professional.
Who To See
Health professionals who can diagnose and treat
ear infections (acute otitis media) include:
Children who have ear infections often may need to see
one of these specialists:
To prepare for your appointment, see the topic Making the Most of Your Appointment.