Call 911 Now
- Past severe allergic reaction to fire ant stings (not just hives) and stung less than 2 hours ago
- Wheezing or trouble breathing
- Hoarseness, cough or tightness in the throat or chest
- Trouble swallowing or drooling
- Speech is slurred
- Acts or talks confused
- Passed out (fainted) or too weak to stand
- You think your child has a life-threatening emergency
Call Doctor or Seek Care Now
- Sting inside the mouth
- Sting on the eye
- Stomach pain or vomiting
- Age less than 1 year with 20 or more stings. Newborn if more than 5.
- More than 5 stings for 10 pounds (5 kg) of weight. In teens, more than 50 stings.
- Fever and sting looks infected (spreading redness)
- 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
- Painful spreading redness started more than 24 hours after the bite. Note: any redness starting in the first 24 hours is a reaction to the bite.
- More than 48 hours since the sting and redness getting larger
- Swelling is huge (4 inches or 10 cm). It spreads across a joint such as the wrist.
- You think your child needs to be seen, but the problem is not urgent
Contact Doctor During Office Hours
- Scab that looks infected (drains pus or gets bigger) not better with antibiotic ointment
- Severe itching not better after 24 hours of using steroid cream
- You have other questions or concerns
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Self Care at Home
- Normal reaction to a fire ant sting
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