Call 911 Now
- Not moving or too weak to stand
- You think your child has a life-threatening emergency
Call Doctor or Seek Care Now
- Bright red skin or red streak
- Very painful swelling or very swollen face
- New red rash in addition to chickenpox rash
- Walking is not steady
- Trouble breathing
- Bleeding into the chickenpox
- Fever over 104° F (40° C)
- Age less than 1 month old
- Vomits 3 or more times
- Eye pain or constant blinking
- Took a steroid medicine within past 2 weeks
- Weak immune system. Examples are: sickle cell disease, HIV, cancer, organ transplant, taking oral steroids.
- Chronic skin disease (such as eczema)
- Chronic lung disease (such as cystic fibrosis)
- Your child looks or acts very sick
- You think your child needs to be seen, and the problem is urgent
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Contact Doctor Within 24 Hours
- Age less than 1 year old
- Teen 13 years or older has chickenpox
- Been near to person with chickenpox or shingles in last 5 days. Also, healthy person who never had a chickenpox vaccine.
- One lymph node gets larger and more tender
- Fever lasts more than 4 days
- Fever returns after being gone more than 24 hours
- Scab or sore drains yellow pus
- One sore gets much larger in size than the others
- Gets new chickenpox after day 6
- You think your child needs to be seen, but the problem is not urgent
Contact Doctor During Office Hours
- You have other questions or concerns
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Self Care at Home
- Chickenpox with no other problems
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