Symptoms
General signs and symptoms:
1. Fever higher than 100
degrees (oral thermometer reading).
2. Chills and sweating.
3. Headache.
4. Fatigue.
5. Muscle aches or soreness.
6. Swollen lymph nodes.
Respiratory infection:
1. Coughing and sneezing.
2. Sinus or chest pain.
3. Sore throat, congestion, and
excess mucus.
4. Watery eyes.
Infection of the mouth,
ears, or eyes:
1. Localized pain or
irritation.
2. Swelling, tenderness,
unusual redness.
Joint infection:
1. Tenderness, pain and redness
or inflammation in the joints, often in only one part of the body.
Intestinal infection:
1. Nausea and vomiting.
2. Abdominal cramps or gas
pains.
3. Diarrhea.
4. Dehydration.
5. Bladder infection.
6. Painful, burning, and
frequent urination.
7. Bloody urine.
What
to do now
1. Rest, drink lots of water,
and eat healthfully.
2. If you are younger than 65
and in good health, let a low fever (oral thermometer reading – below 104
degrees in adults, 102 in children, and 100.4 in infants under three
months) run its course. Low fever is usually not dangerous and may
actually speed recovery from the infection.
3. Give your body a chance to
recover.
4. Avoid alcohol and smoking.
When
to call a doctor
1. If your temperature rises to
104 or higher, or goes over 101 with joint pain; if a child’s body
temperature rises to 102 or higher; or an infant’s to 100.4 or higher.
2. If you develop symptoms of
severe infection, such as problems speaking, seeing, swallowing, or
breathing, or if you have difficulty moving.
3. If your skin has been
bruised by a human or animal bite.
4. If you have symptoms such as
diarrhea, vomiting, or a sore throat, that persist or worsen after one or
two days.
Solutions
1. Eat healthy foods, drink
plenty of fluids.
2. Exercise regularly.
3. Get enough sleep.
4. Don’t smoke or use drugs.
5. Don’t drink alcohol. If
however, you must, don’t take more than 250 ml alcohol in any particular
day if you’re man. But if you’re a woman you shouldn’t take more than 125
ml. Don’t drink more than three times a week.
6. Wash your hands frequently,
and avoid putting your fingers in your mouth or rubbing your eyes.
E Be sure that meat is cooked is cooked fully and that food is prepared in a clean place. Do not share silverware.
E Be sure that meat is cooked is cooked fully and that food is prepared in a clean place. Do not share silverware.
7. Keep your immune system in
good working order.
8. Take steps to reduce stress
in your life; stress weakens the immune system. Try meditation, yoga, or
deep breathing.
9. Get a flu shot yearly.
10. Ask your doctor about
immunization against pneumonia.
11. Have your children
vaccinated against childhood diseases.
12. Menstruating women should
change tampons at least every six hours to avoid incubating harmful
bacteria.
13. Keep an eye out for changes
in your body-from inflammation around nicks and cuts to a runny nose or
genital discharge. Attend to symptoms promptly.
14. Practice safe sex: A sexual
relationship with only one person you know to be uninfected is safest. If
you have sex with more than one person, use latex condoms, even during
oral sex, and never reuse a condom.
15. Don’t have unprotected sex
with anyone whose sexual history you don’t know or who isn’t willing to be
tested for HIV.
16. Avoid anal sex; it
increases your risk because of the chance of bleeding.
17. Hugging, kissing (any part
of the body), message, and touching are safe activities.
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