Vomiting
What causes vomiting?
When your child throws up, it is often caused by a virus. Your
child may also have watery bowel movements (diarrhea). Most of the
time, vomiting stops in 6 to 24 hours. The diarrhea may keep going
for a day or 2 more. If your child has vomiting without diarrhea,
and it lasts more than 24 hours, your child may have something
more serious.
How can I take care of my child?
- Give clear fluids for 8 hours. Give 1 teaspoon to 1
tablespoon of clear fluid every 5 minutes. After 4 hours,
double the amount each hour.
- For babies under 1 year old. Give your baby a clear fluid
drink like Pedialyte or the store brand. These drinks help
give your baby important minerals that can be lost when
throwing up and sick. Until you can get some, give formula
1 tsp at a time. If your child also has diarrhea, use
Pedialyte.
- For breast-fed babies. If you are breast-feeding and
your baby has thrown up more than once, continue
breast-feeding, but nurse on only one side for 10 minutes
every 1 to 2 hours. If your baby has thrown up 3 or more
times, nurse for 5 minutes every 30 to 60 minutes.
- For toddlers over 1 year old. The best clear fluid is
water or ice chips.
- For children over 2 years old. Give your child water or
ice chips. You can also give your child flat, lemon-lime
soda. Make a drink of half water and half soda.
- Give bland foods 8 hours after your child stops throwing up.
- Babies who eat solid food can have applesauce, strained
bananas, and rice cereal.
- Older children can have saltine crackers, cereals, bland
soups, and mashed potatoes, or honey on white bread.
- Give the bland foods for 24 hours.
- Do not give medicine your child doesn't need. Do not give any
medicine unless your doctor tells you to.
Call your child's doctor right away if:
- Your child shows signs of not getting enough fluids (does not
urinate (pee) in 8 hours, has a very dry mouth, has no tears
when he cries).
- Your child vomits blood or something that looks like coffee
grounds.
- Your child vomits repeatedly AND also has watery diarrhea.
- Your child is confused and is hard to wake up.
- Your child has stomach pain when not vomiting.
- Your child starts to act very sick.
Call your doctor during office hours if:
- Your child is under age 2 and throws up for more than 24
hours.
- Your child is over age 2 and throws up for more than 48 hours.
- You have other concerns or questions.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, MD, author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2009-08-13
Last reviewed: 2009-06-15
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
© 2009 RelayHealth and/or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.