📘 Health Education on Home Care of Fever
Subject: Community Health Nursing Practical | Target Group: Mothers / Family Members / Community People | Duration: 30-40 Minutes
📋 General Information
| Student Name | [Your Name] |
| Course | BSc Nursing / GNM / ANM |
| Subject | Community Health Nursing Practical |
| Topic | Home Care of Fever |
| Target Group | Mothers / Family Members / Community People |
| Venue | Home Visit / Anganwadi Centre / PHC / Community Area, [Village/City] |
| Date | [Enter Date] |
| Duration | 30-40 Minutes |
| Teaching Method | Lecture, Discussion, Demonstration, Question-Answer |
| AV Aids | Thermometer, Chart, Flashcards, Poster, Bowl, Water, Towel, Pamphlet |
| Clinical Instructor | [Instructor Name] |
📖 Introduction
Fever is a common health problem in children and adults. It is usually a sign that the body is fighting an infection. Fever itself is not always dangerous, but very high fever, fever with danger signs, or fever in infants, pregnant women, elderly people, and seriously ill persons needs immediate medical attention. Proper home care helps to provide comfort, prevent dehydration, monitor temperature, and identify danger signs early.
🎯 General Objective
At the end of the health education, mothers and family members will be able to understand the meaning of fever, correct home care measures, temperature checking, tepid sponging, fluid intake, safe medicine use, danger signs, and when to seek medical help.
📋 Specific Objectives
- Define fever in simple words.
- State normal body temperature.
- List common causes of fever.
- Identify signs and symptoms of fever.
- Demonstrate correct method of temperature checking.
- Explain tepid sponging and comfort measures.
- Describe fluid intake, nutrition, rest, and safe medicine use.
- List danger signs and when to visit health facility.
📝 Assessment of Learners
| Age Group | Adult family members / Mothers / Caregivers |
| Educational Level | Literate / Semi-literate / Illiterate |
| Previous Knowledge | May have basic knowledge about fever but may not know correct temperature checking and danger signs |
| Language | Simple Hindi / English / Local language |
| Learning Need | Need knowledge about fever care, fluids, tepid sponging, safe medicines, danger signs, and timely referral |
📚 Audio-Visual Aids
- Digital thermometer / clinical thermometer
- Chart on normal body temperature
- Poster on danger signs of fever
- Bowl, lukewarm water, and towel for tepid sponging demonstration
- Flashcards on do’s and don’ts in fever
- Pamphlet for take-home message
📑 Lesson Plan
| Time | Specific Objective | Content | Teaching-Learning Activity | AV Aid | Evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 min | Introduce topic | Meaning and importance of home care of fever | Teacher introduces topic and asks previous knowledge | Poster | What is fever? |
| 5 min | Explain normal temperature and causes | Normal temperature, common causes like infection, malaria, dengue, cold, UTI | Lecture and discussion | Temperature chart | Name two causes of fever |
| 6 min | Demonstrate temperature checking | Use of thermometer, reading temperature, cleaning thermometer | Demonstration and return demonstration | Thermometer | How to check temperature? |
| 6 min | Explain home care | Rest, light clothing, fluids, nutrition, ventilation, comfort | Lecture and discussion | Flashcards | What fluids can be given? |
| 6 min | Demonstrate tepid sponging | Lukewarm water sponging, avoid cold water and alcohol rub | Demonstration | Bowl, water, towel | Which water is used for sponging? |
| 6 min | Discuss danger signs | Convulsions, breathing difficulty, persistent vomiting, dehydration, rash, unconsciousness | Discussion and Q&A | Danger signs poster | Name two danger signs |
| 4 min | Explain prevention and referral | Hygiene, mosquito control, safe water, timely visit to health facility | Counselling | Pamphlet | When to visit hospital? |
| 3-5 min | Summarize and evaluate | Main points and questions | Summary and oral questions | Pamphlet | Ask evaluation questions |
📖 Content Matter
1. Meaning of Fever
Fever is a rise in body temperature above the normal range. It is commonly a symptom of infection or inflammation in the body. Fever may occur due to viral infection, bacterial infection, malaria, dengue, typhoid, urinary tract infection, respiratory infection, or other illnesses.
2. Normal Body Temperature
Normal body temperature is around 37°C or 98.6°F. A temperature above the normal range may be considered fever. Temperature may vary slightly according to age, time of day, activity, and site of measurement.
| Temperature Range | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 36.5°C - 37.5°C / 97.7°F - 99.5°F | Usually normal range |
| 37.6°C - 38°C / 99.6°F - 100.4°F | Low-grade fever |
| 38.1°C - 39°C / 100.5°F - 102.2°F | Moderate fever |
| Above 39°C / 102.2°F | High fever, needs careful monitoring |
| Above 40°C / 104°F | Very high fever, seek medical care urgently |
3. Common Causes of Fever
- Common cold, flu and viral fever.
- Respiratory infections such as cough, pneumonia or throat infection.
- Malaria, dengue, chikungunya or other mosquito-borne diseases.
- Typhoid and other food or water-borne infections.
- Urinary tract infection.
- Ear infection or skin infection.
- Post-vaccination mild fever in children.
- Heat-related illness or dehydration.
4. Signs and Symptoms of Fever
- Hot body or warm forehead.
- Chills or shivering.
- Sweating.
- Headache and body ache.
- Weakness and tiredness.
- Loss of appetite.
- Irritability in children.
- Fast pulse or fast breathing may occur in high fever.
5. Temperature Checking at Home
Temperature should be checked with a clean thermometer. Digital thermometer is easy and safe for home use.
- Wash hands before and after checking temperature.
- Clean the thermometer tip before use.
- Place thermometer correctly according to site: underarm, oral, or as advised.
- Wait until the beep sound in digital thermometer.
- Read and note the temperature with time.
- Clean thermometer after use and keep it safely.
- Do not use the same thermometer without cleaning.
6. Home Care Measures for Fever
- Give adequate rest to the patient.
- Keep the patient in a well-ventilated room.
- Use light cotton clothes; avoid heavy blankets unless the patient has chills.
- Give plenty of fluids to prevent dehydration.
- Give light, easily digestible food.
- Monitor temperature regularly.
- Maintain personal hygiene and hand washing.
- Do not force food if appetite is poor; offer small frequent meals.
7. Fluid Intake and Nutrition
Fever increases fluid loss through sweating and fast breathing. Therefore, adequate fluids are very important.
- Give clean water frequently.
- Give ORS if there is diarrhea or dehydration risk.
- Give coconut water, lemon water, rice water, soup, dal water or buttermilk according to availability.
- Continue breastfeeding in infants.
- Give soft foods like khichdi, dal, curd rice, fruits, porridge or soup.
- Avoid oily, spicy and heavy foods during high fever.
8. Tepid Sponging
Tepid sponging means wiping the body with lukewarm water to help reduce high temperature and provide comfort. It may be done when fever is high or the patient is uncomfortable.
- Take lukewarm water in a bowl.
- Dip a clean towel or cloth in water and squeeze extra water.
- Wipe forehead, neck, armpits, arms, chest, abdomen and legs gently.
- Repeat for 15-20 minutes if needed.
- Do not use ice-cold water.
- Do not use alcohol rub.
- Stop if the patient starts shivering and keep the patient comfortable.
9. Safe Use of Medicine
- Give medicine only as advised by doctor, nurse, ANM or health worker.
- Paracetamol is commonly used for fever, but correct dose according to age and weight is important.
- Do not give extra dose or repeated dose without advice.
- Do not give antibiotics without doctor’s prescription.
- Do not use adult medicines for children without medical advice.
- Avoid self-medication, especially in infants, pregnant women, elderly and chronic illness patients.
10. Danger Signs in Fever
- Fever above 40°C / 104°F.
- Convulsions or fits.
- Difficulty in breathing or fast breathing.
- Unconsciousness, confusion or extreme drowsiness.
- Persistent vomiting or inability to drink.
- Signs of dehydration: dry mouth, sunken eyes, very less urine, lethargy.
- Severe headache, neck stiffness or sensitivity to light.
- Skin rash, bleeding from nose/gums, black stools or red spots.
- Fever lasting more than 3 days.
- Fever in infant below 3 months.
- Fever in pregnancy, elderly, or patient with serious illness.
11. When to Visit Health Facility
- If fever is very high or not reducing.
- If fever continues for more than 3 days.
- If fever comes with cough, breathing difficulty, rash, bleeding, severe weakness, vomiting or diarrhea.
- If child is not feeding, very sleepy, irritable or has convulsions.
- If malaria, dengue, typhoid or other serious infection is suspected.
- If patient is pregnant, elderly, infant, or has chronic disease.
12. Prevention of Fever-Related Infections
- Wash hands with soap and water.
- Drink safe and clean water.
- Eat fresh, covered and hygienic food.
- Use mosquito net and prevent mosquito breeding.
- Keep surroundings clean and dry.
- Cover mouth and nose while coughing or sneezing.
- Avoid close contact with sick persons when possible.
- Complete immunization as per schedule.
13. Role of Nurse / ANM / ASHA
- Educate family members about home care of fever.
- Teach correct temperature checking.
- Demonstrate tepid sponging.
- Identify danger signs and refer early.
- Promote ORS, fluids, breastfeeding and nutrition.
- Educate about mosquito control, safe water and hygiene.
- Discourage self-medication and misuse of antibiotics.
- Maintain records and follow-up of fever cases in community.
✅ Summary
- Fever is a rise in body temperature above normal.
- Temperature should be checked with a clean thermometer.
- Rest, light clothing, fluids and light food are important in fever.
- Tepid sponging with lukewarm water can help reduce high fever.
- Medicines should be used safely and antibiotics should not be taken without prescription.
- Danger signs like convulsions, breathing difficulty, dehydration, rash, bleeding or fever more than 3 days need medical care.
🌟 Check fever, give fluids, provide comfort, and seek care early if danger signs appear.
❓ Evaluation Questions
| S.No. | Question | Expected Answer |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | What is fever? | Rise in body temperature above normal |
| 2 | What is normal body temperature? | About 37°C or 98.6°F |
| 3 | Name two home care measures for fever. | Rest, fluids, light clothing, tepid sponging |
| 4 | Which water is used for tepid sponging? | Lukewarm water |
| 5 | Name two danger signs in fever. | Convulsions, breathing difficulty, dehydration, unconsciousness |
| 6 | Should antibiotics be taken without prescription? | No |
🏁 Conclusion
Home care of fever includes correct temperature checking, adequate rest, fluids, light food, comfort measures, tepid sponging and safe use of medicines. Family members should identify danger signs early and take the patient to a health facility without delay. Proper hygiene, safe water, mosquito control and immunization help prevent many fever-related illnesses.
📖 Bibliography / References
- K. Park, Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine, 27th Edition
- B.T. Basavanthappa, Community Health Nursing, Jaypee Brothers
- Kozier & Erb's, Fundamentals of Nursing, Pearson
- World Health Organization — Fever and Child Health Guidelines
- Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India — Community Health Guidelines
⚕️ Disclaimer: This health education practical file is prepared for educational and academic purposes only for ANM, GNM, and BSc Nursing students. It is not intended for actual diagnosis or treatment. Always follow institutional guidelines and consult a qualified health professional for patient care.