meara, medicine is amazing.
My dad has been having eye surgery recently, but I'm convinced that everything he's doing is to prep for debilitation and I don't want to ask questions.
I am at a power user level with SQL, as opposed to developer, at least here. The number of tables and schemas they need to string together to get any decent answer for anything is kinda scary, and puts me in my place.
how do I know if I have the flu or not?
I think by level of fever -- at least, the one time I'm sure I had the flu, the doctor said no, because my fever wasn't high enough. (Although who can tell what my fever ever would have been, since I was downing advil like it was my job.)
I don't have a fever though. At least I haven't had one the last 2 days I checked it. I suppose I could have had one before.
I think something is wrong with my body temperature because I have literally never had a fever as an adult. I swear I FEEL like I have a fever when my temp is 99 degrees, and when I take my temp at normal (non-sick days) it is about 96 degrees, but my doctor just tells me that 99 degrees is not a fever.
the printed material with the target thermometer says anything about 99.5 is defined as a fever.
I did not know it was possible to feel like ass warmed over and not have a fever.
(/sulk)
I think fever is required for flu.
Work has been going at breakneck speed and I am convinced I am missing things. I hope today to go through pile of notes.
Well, if normal body temperature is 98.6, and anything over 99.5 is a fever, than 1 degree is a fever. Therefore if my temperature is 99 degrees and my normal temperature is 96 degrees, don't I have the equivalent of a 101.6 degree fever?
Flu also tends to have that achy-tired feeling. Colds may make you feel miserable, but for me at least they don't make me feel physically weaker.
I'm the same way, Sophia. My healthy temp is usually 97.4, so if I have a temp of over 99, I usually consider it a fever.
normal body temperature is 98.6
This is more or less a myth. (At best, it's an average number which may or may not have any relevance to any individual's "normal" body temperature.)
I know for kids, 100.4 is the official cutoff for fever, but you're not supposed to worry unless sustained for more than 2-3 days.