Child fever diary tracker Philippines
Child Health ToolsFever Diary

Child Fever DiaryTrack Every Temperature. Share with Your Pediatrician.

Log fever readings, symptoms, and medications in one place. Print or share a complete fever report with your doctor — essential for dengue monitoring and febrile illness tracking in the Philippines.

Dengue Fever MonitoringMedication LogDoctor-Ready Report

Fever Summary

4

Readings

2

Days Logged

39.2°C

Peak Temp

Moderate Fever

Latest Status

Temperature Unit

When to Go to Hospital

  • Fever above 40°C / 104°F
  • Baby under 3 months with any fever
  • Fever lasting more than 3 days
  • Fever with rash (dengue warning)
  • Severe headache or stiff neck
  • Difficulty breathing
  • Persistent vomiting or unable to drink
Full fever guide

Monday, March 30, 2026

1 reading

37.4°C

Normal

07:00

"Fever broke overnight. Child more active."

Sunday, March 29, 2026

3 readings

38.6°C

Moderate Fever

08:00

Paracetamol (Biogesic) — 5ml

Headache / Sakit ng uloPoor appetite

"Started last night. Gave Biogesic at 8am."

39.2°C

High Fever

14:30

Paracetamol (Biogesic) — 5ml

Chills / PanginginigVomiting / Pagsusuka

"Fever went back up. Vomited once after lunch."

38.1°C

Moderate Fever

20:00

Paracetamol (Biogesic) — 5ml

Poor appetite

"Fever coming down. Ate a little rice."

Fever Diary Tips

How to Use Fever Diary Effectively

Log Every 4–6 Hours

Record temperature every 4–6 hours while fever is active — especially after giving medication. This helps your doctor see if the fever pattern matches dengue, viral infection, or bacterial infection.

Bring the Diary to Your Doctor

Use the 'Copy Report' button to copy a text summary. Paste it in a message or print it. Doctors appreciate a clear fever timeline — it saves consultation time and improves diagnosis accuracy.

Log Medication Dose & Time

Always log when and how much paracetamol or ibuprofen was given. This prevents accidental double-dosing — a common source of medication errors among Filipino parents during late-night fevers.

Watch for the 3-Day Rule

Any fever lasting 3 or more days requires a doctor visit in the Philippines. For children under 2, see a doctor after 48 hours. The diary automatically alerts you when this threshold is reached.

Note Urine Output

In the Notes field, record if your child is urinating normally. Decreased urination is an early sign of dehydration — critical information for assessing dengue severity and deciding on hospitalization.

Share with Both Parents

Use the Copy Report feature to keep both parents or caregivers in sync. Especially important for OFW families where one parent is abroad — they can monitor the child's condition remotely via text updates.

🆘 Emergency Child Health Advisor

MAIA AI · Available 24/7 · Not a substitute for emergency care

LIFE-THREATENING EMERGENCY? Call 911 or go to the nearest hospital immediately. Do not wait for AI guidance.

What's happening right now?

MAIA
Hi! I'm MAIA, your 24/7 Emergency Child Health Advisor. 💙 I'm here to help you right now. Tell me what's happening with your child — age, symptoms, how long — and I'll guide you step by step. ⚠️ AI guidance only — not a substitute for emergency care. If breathing is affected or your child is unconscious, call 911 immediately.

MAIA AI · For emergencies call 911 · KidSafe PH