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Clinical Guidance
How to assess symptoms and act early
For child health support in Meknes, seek pediatric review early when fever, cough, vomiting, rash, or feeding problems are persistent or worsening.
Read full symptom and waiting guide
Pediatric triage focuses on hydration status, breathing effort, behavior change, and age-specific risk. Children can decompensate quickly, so trend matters more than isolated numbers.
When to request same-day medical help
Fever remains high or recurrent for more than 24 hours, especially in younger children.
Cough, wheeze, vomiting, diarrhea, ear pain, or rash is not improving with basic care.
Reduced feeding, irritability, poor sleep, or low activity is clearly affecting the child.
Known chronic pediatric conditions are flaring and home management is no longer enough.
Emergency warning signs (call now)
Breathing difficulty, chest retractions, blue lips, or pauses in breathing.
Seizure, severe lethargy, unresponsiveness, or persistent confusion.
Signs of dehydration: very low urine output, dry mouth, no tears, or sunken eyes.
Non-blanching rash, neck stiffness, or rapid worsening with high fever.
What to do while waiting for the doctor
Offer frequent small fluids and monitor urine output.
Record temperature, breathing pattern, and timing of symptoms.
Use only age-appropriate medicines and doses previously advised for the child.
Prepare child weight, vaccination history, and recent medications.
Good outcomes usually come from early escalation, clear symptom tracking, and disciplined waiting steps.
This guide is educational and does not replace medical diagnosis.