Assessing ear problems
The Assess and Classify chart will help you identify ear problems caused by ear infection. You should ask about ear problems for every sick child who is brought to your health facility.
When you assess a child you will be looking for the following signs:
- ear pain
- ear discharge, and
- if discharge is present, how long the child has had the discharge, and
- tender swelling behind the ear, a sign of mastoiditis.
Assess for ear problems
ASK: Does the child have an ear problem?
IF YES, ASK: | LOOK AND FEEL: |
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∙ Is there ear pain? ∙ Is there ear discharge? If yes, for how long? |
∙ Look for pus draining from the ear ∙ Feel for tender swelling behind the ear |
ASK: Does the child have an ear problem?
If the mother answers no, you do not need to assess the child for ear problems. Your next question in this case would be whether the child has a throat infection.
If the mother answers yes, ask the next question:
ASK: Does the child have ear pain?
If the mother is not sure that the child has ear pain, ask if the child has been irritable and rubbing his ear. Whether the answer is yes or no you should ask the next question.
ASK: Is there ear discharge? If yes, for how long?
When asking about ear discharge, use words the mother understands. For example, 'Is there any fluid that looks like pus coming out from the ears?' If the child has had ear discharge, ask the mother for how long.
LOOK for pus draining from the ear
Look inside the child's ear to see if pus is draining from the ear. Pus is usually white, creamy or light green and may have an offensive smell.
- An ear discharge that has been present for two weeks or more is defined as a chronic ear infection.
- An ear discharge that has been present for less than two weeks is defined as an acute ear infection.
FEEL for tender swelling behind the ear
Feel behind both ears. Compare them and decide if there is tender swelling of the mastoid bone. In infants, the swelling may be above the ear.
Both tenderness and swelling must be present to classify mastoiditis, a deep infection in the mastoid bone.
How can you find out whether a sick child brought to your health facility has ear problems?
You could ask the mother whether the child has been irritable and rubbing his ear, which suggests it might be painful. You would ask her whether there has been any fluid coming from the child's ear and for how long this has been happening.