It is that time of year when we are seeing many patients sick with upper respiratory infections and fevers. We have been seeing a recent increase in RSV cases in particular, which is common for this time of year.
RSV is a virus that typically occurs late fall through mid-spring in the Northeast. For most children, it is a common cold with mild fever, significant runny nose, and cough. The vast majority of children have mild disease that needs no intervention and does not need to be tested for RSV. There are no antiviral medications that help to decrease the severity of RSV once you are infected. Additionally, children with RSV who are wheezing but not otherwise in any distress (feeding ok, reasonably active, and more-or-less themselves) do not require treatment for their wheezing (according to the most recent guidelines). Children with RSV may remain in daycare or preschool unless they have symptoms such as fever or increased work of breathing that would make them unsafe to be in daycare.
Treatment for upper respiratory infections in young infants and children includes nasal saline and suctioning, and a cool mist humidifier for congestion. Acetaminophen and/or ibuprofen may be used for fever or pain depending on your child’s age. In general cough and cold medications are not recommended in young children due to a lack of studies showing efficacy and potential side effects. Honey-based cough suppressants may be considered for children over one year old.
If your child has symptoms of RSV or another similar upper respiratory infection, a test is not necessarily needed as it will not usually change care.
When should your child be seen?
Perhaps the most important thing you can do to keep your child, your family and your community safe is for you and your children to receive their Influenza (Flu) and COVID vaccines (including all recommended boosters). These vaccines have been proven to decrease the risk of hospitalization and death in individuals and are safe and well-tolerated. At this point, deaths from COVID or Influenza are considered vaccine-preventable. We cannot recommend these vaccines strongly enough. GET VACCINATED!!!! While you have seen from our previous emails that RSV immunizations are in very short supply nationwide, they are another very important way to keep your newborn safe against RSV. We highly encourage you to get them immunized prior to hospital discharge when the option is available.
As always, thank you for your patience as phone wait times (and, sometimes, in office wait times) increase and appointment availability becomes tighter during this illness season. We are doing our best to make sure all of our patients are healthy!