PEDIATRICS Vol. 107 No. 6 June 2001, pp. 1241-1246
Fever Phobia Revisited: Have Parental Misconceptions About Fever Changed in 20 Years?
Received Jul 14, 2000; accepted Sep 5, 2000.

From the * Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins Bayview
Medical Center, and Objectives. Fever is one of the most
common reasons that parents seek medical attention for their children.
Parental concerns arise in part because of the belief that fever is a
disease rather than a symptom or sign of illness. Twenty years ago,
Barton Schmitt, MD, found that parents had numerous misconceptions
about fever. These unrealistic concerns were termed "fever phobia."
More recent concerns for occult bacteremia in febrile children have led
to more aggressive laboratory testing and treatment. Our objectives for
this study were to explore current parental attitudes toward fever, to
compare these attitudes with those described by Schmitt in 1980, and to
determine whether recent, more aggressive laboratory testing and
presumptive treatment for occult bacteremia is associated with
increased parental concern regarding fever.
Methods. Between June and September 1999, a single
research assistant administered a cross-sectional 29-item questionnaire
to caregivers whose children were enrolled in 2 urban hospital-based
pediatric clinics in Baltimore, Maryland. The questionnaire was
administered before either health maintenance or acute care visits at
both sites. Portions of the questionnaire were modeled after Schmitt's and elicited information about definition of fever, concerns about fever, and fever management. Additional information included home fever
reduction techniques, frequency of temperature monitoring, and parental
recall of past laboratory workup and treatment that these children had
received during health care visits for fever.
Results. A total of 340 caregivers were interviewed.
Fifty-six percent of caregivers were very worried about the potential
harm of fever in their children, 44% considered a temperature of
38.9°C (102°F) to be a "high" fever, and 7% thought that a
temperature could rise to Conclusions. Fever phobia persists. Pediatric health care
providers have a unique opportunity to make an impact on parental
understanding of fever and its role in illness. Future studies are
needed to evaluate educational interventions and to identify the types
of medical care practices that foster fever phobia.fever, fever phobia, child, children, antipyretics, sponging, health
care practices.
The Johns Hopkins Children's Center, Baltimore,
Maryland.
43.4°C (
110°F) if left untreated.
Ninety-one percent of caregivers believed that a fever could cause
harmful effects; 21% listed brain damage, and 14% listed death.
Strikingly, 52% of caregivers said that they would check their
child's temperature
1 hour when their child had a fever, 25% gave
antipyretics for temperatures <37.8°C (<100°F), and 85% would
awaken their child to give antipyretics. Fourteen percent of caregivers
gave acetaminophen, and 44% gave ibuprofen at too frequent dosing
intervals. Of the 73% of caregivers who said that they sponged their
child to treat a fever, 24% sponged at temperatures
37.8°C
(
100°F); 18% used alcohol. Forty-six percent of caregivers listed
doctors as their primary resource for information about fever.
Caregivers who stated that they were very worried about fever were more
likely in the past to have had a child who was evaluated for a fever,
to have had blood work performed on their child during a febrile
illness, and to have perceived their doctors to be very worried about
fever. Compared with 20 years ago, more caregivers listed seizure as a
potential harm of fever, woke their children and checked temperatures more often during febrile illnesses, and gave antipyretics or initiated
sponging more frequently for possible normal temperatures.
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