How Soon After Starting Antibiotics Can a Child Return to School?

If your child is on antibiotics, how long do you have to wait before they can return to school? For some infections, it's 24 hours, but that's not always the case.
Returning to School After Antibiotics
Q
How soon after a young child has begun taking antibiotics should he return to school? The research I've read says that once a child has been taking the medication for 24 hours, it's okay for him to return to school. Parents in our center think that's too soon. Please give us your expert advice.
A
It depends on the type of infection. It also depends on whether you're concerned about the spread of infection or about how comfortable the child will be.

Returning After 24 Hours

For many of the common childhood bacterial infections that we treat with antibiotics, 24 hours of the antibiotic is enough to make sure the child is no longer contagious (able to spread the germ to others), but that's not necessarily true for all infections.

Streptococcal infections (strep throat) and bacterial conjunctivitis are probably the two most common ones, and both require antibiotics for just 24 hours before a child can return to school without worrying that he will spread the infection to other children.

Circumstances That Require More Than 24 Hours

However, pertussis (whooping cough) requires five days of antibiotics to make sure that it cannot be spread. Some intestinal infections and pneumonias (lung infections) can still be spread even after the child has finished the full course of antibiotics. Your local department of public health has printed guidelines that detail the recommendations for various types of infections.

The other factors to keep in mind when determining how soon a child should return to school are length of fever, energy level and appetite. Even if a child has completed the appropriate amount of antibiotic to stop him from being contagious, the child may still have fever, act fatigued or have a poor appetite. That would make him an unsuitable candidate for a full day of school. Staying at home for another day or two until he is up to full speed may be the best course of action.

Viruses

Viral illnesses are actually more common and spread more readily than bacterial illness in school-aged kids. Colds and the flu can wreak havoc on a classroom. There is no treatment that will make the viral illness go away sooner, and the viruses can remain in the nose and throat for days or weeks.

We obviously can't keep kids at home for three weeks every time they get a cold, but a day or two when the nasal symptoms are at their peak is not a bad idea.

The bottom line is that good precautions in school and at home make sense. Frequent hand-washing by everyone, including the kids, is probably the most important thing that can be done to try to limit the spread of infection.

Want to make sure your kids are eating right so they don't get sick in the first place? Check out our tips!

Shari Nethersole is a physician at Children's Hospital, Boston, and an instructor in Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School. She graduated from Yale University and Harvard Medical School, and did her internship and residency at Children's Hospital, Boston. As a pediatrician, she tries to work with parents to identify and address their concerns.

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