If it starts to get thicker and green or dark colored it’s most likely bacterial but not always. If your child has a runny nose and a few days later a high fever with thick dark color mucus, and headache you go to the doctor. Dark green mucus is one possible symptom of bacterial sinusitis. Like any illness there is always a possible list of symptoms. An exam and tests are necessary to diagnose. I don’t know why people freak over giving their kids antibiotics. |
Hegseth eliminated the requirement for flu vaccines in new army people. About 160 Air Force recruits within weeks of the eliminated vaccine are sick with the flu. They need to be isolated and training is delayed. Only 40% opted to receive the vaccine. Hegseth probably called them pussys |
| School systems now require doctors notes when absent for consecutive days. A kid cannot stay home for 5 days without a doctor note. |
Kids under age 10-12 aren’t typically going to present with headaches from sinusitis because their frontal sinuses aren’t fully developed yet. Again- people know a little info but not all the info and it leads to them demanding antibiotics because their 6 year old has a headache and a fever a week into their cold. More likely it’s a new viral process. The mucus was going to be thicker and darker anyways at that point. |
If your kid is sick enough to be unable to attend school for 5 full days in a row, they should be seen by their pediatrician. That’s not a school system glitch. Most kids are ok to go back after 1-2 days at home from the vast majority of viruses. A fever for 5 full days needs an assessment from someone. (This is the pediatrician) |