Book Appointment By Choosing The Type Of Appointment You Desire For Your Child
How Long Does Strep Throat Last in Kids? Timeline + What Helps
Quick Answer: Most children with strep throat start feeling clearly better within 24 to 48 hours after starting the right antibiotic. The sore throat and fever usually improve first, while energy and appetite may take a little longer to come back. Even when a child feels better quickly, the full antibiotic course still matters. When…
Baby Fever: When to Worry vs. Watch — Pediatrician
Quick Answer: A rectal temperature of 100.4°F (38°C) or higher in a baby under 3 months needs prompt medical attention. In older babies, the number still matters, but behavior, breathing, feeding, hydration, and overall appearance matter even more. A baby who is hard to wake, breathing poorly, not drinking, or looking very ill should be…
When Do Babies Start Smiling? What to Expect
Quick Answer: Most babies begin showing a true social smile by the end of the second month, often around 6 to 8 weeks. Before then, smiles are usually reflexive and happen during sleep or while settling. A social smile is different because it happens in response to a face, a voice, or interaction. Parents wait…
When Do Babies Start Sitting Up? Age, Stages + How to Help
Quick Answer: Babies usually begin sitting with support before they can sit fully on their own. Many show the first signs between about 4 and 7 months, and independent sitting often becomes steadier over the following months. The exact timeline varies, but head control, trunk strength, and balance all come first. Sitting is one of…
When Do Babies Start Walking? Normal Age Range + What Helps
Quick Answer: Many babies take first steps sometime around the end of the first year, but there is a normal range. Some start closer to 9 months, many closer to 12 months, and some do not walk independently until later. What matters more than one exact month is the overall pattern of pulling up, cruising,…
Does Bactrim Treat Strep Throat in Children? (What Pediatricians Actually Prescribe)
No — Bactrim (trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole) does not treat strep throat. It is not recommended, and pediatricians do not prescribe it for this infection. The bacteria that causes strep throat — Group A Streptococcus — is resistant to Bactrim, meaning the drug will not clear the infection and could allow dangerous complications to develop. The correct first-line…
