go to Allina Hospitals & Clinics home Careers | Contact Us | En Español | Employee Sign-in

Advanced Search


Pregnancy and Parenting email registration button

Your baby: Signs to call your baby's health care provider

Call your baby's health care provider right away if your baby has any of these signs:

  • breathing difficulties, like breathing too fast or too slow, grunting, or whistling (A newborn normally breathes about 40 to 60 times a minute.)
  • blue color around the lips and tongue
  • yellow or pale skin that is different from what you've seen before
  • a temperature of 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit or higher
  • a temperature of 97.6 degrees Fahrenheit or lower
  • continuous crying that cannot be comforted
  • a change in activity level: becoming unusually listless, tired, restless, or fussy
  • refusing to eat for more than 2 feedings
  • frequent or forceful vomiting
  • more than 5 liquid stools per day if bottlefed, more than 8 if breastfed
  • fewer than 4 to 6 wet diapers in a day (once your baby is older than 3 days)
  • unusual skin rashes, especially blisters
  • reddened skin or smelly drainage around the umbilical cord
  • bleeding, swelling, or foul-smelling drainage from the penis after circumcision
  • reddened skin on the shaft of the penis

 

Non-emergency signs

Call your baby's health care provider for information or to make an office appointment if your baby has any of these non-emergency signs:

  • very hard, pellet-like stools
  • a cough or cold that is constant or getting much worse -- especially if your baby is less than 3 months old
  • yellow or green drainage from the nose
  • drainage from the eyes (other than tears)

 

Questions for you to answer

Call your baby's health care provider whenever you have a concern about your baby's health and well-being.

When you talk to the health care provider, be prepared to answer these questions:

  • What is your baby's age and approximate weight?
  • Does your baby have a fever? How did you take the temperature?
  • How long has your baby been ill?
  • What are the signs and symptoms?
  • Is there any other important health history?
  • Is your baby allergic to anything?
  • What is your pharmacy's phone number?

 

What to know when you call your clinic

When you call the clinic, please have the following information handy:

  • your clinic chart number (if you know it)
  • the name of the health care provider you usually see
  • your child's age and weight
  • your child's temperature (if he or she has a fever), the kind of thermometer you used, and the way you took his or her temperature
  • the medicines your child is taking (if any)
  • your child's allergies or medical problems (if any)
  • the name of your pharmacy and the phone number (if the health care provider needs to call in a prescription).

Related Links


 
Allina Pregnancy Care

Special Topics

Pregnancy & Parenting Tips

Caffeine and pregnancy
The best thing you can do is to consume as little caffeine as possible.

More health tips...

 

Source: Allina Patient Education, Beginnings: Pregnancy, Birth and Beyond, fourth edition, ISBN 1-931876-14-2, and Allina Medical Guide for the Care of Children, third edition, ISBN 1-931876-18-5

First published: 10/04/2002
Last updated: 11/30/2006

Reviewed by: Allina Patient Education experts

 


Back to Top

This site is presented for information only and is not intended to substitute for professional medical advice.
Allina®, the Allina logo, and Medformation® are registered trademarks of Allina Health System.
Presentation and Design ©2008 Allina Health System. All Rights Reserved.