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Acute Asthma Attack Treatment for Children

Medically Reviewed by Dan Brennan, MD on January 15, 2022

Call 911 if the child is:

  • Having a hard time breathing
  • Constantly coughing
  • Unable to talk, eat, or play
  • Vomiting
  • Turning blue in the lips or fingers
  • Convulsing while breathing (using stomach muscles excessively to breathe)

If they do not have the above symptoms but is still complaining of trouble breathing or coughing, do the following:

1. Notify the Child’s Health Care Provider Immediately

2. Follow the Child’s Asthma Plan, if Possible

3. Give Quick-Relief Medicine

If the child has no asthma action plan but has an inhaler:

  • Sit child upright comfortably and loosen tight clothing.
  • Give one puff of quick-relief medicine (albuterol) from child's rescue inhaler, always with a spacer.
  • Ask child to take four breaths from a spacer.

Follow Up

  • An emergency room doctor will check the severity of the attack and provide treatment, including medication.
  • The child may be discharged home or hospitalized for further care, depending on response to treatment.

Show Sources

SOURCES:

KidsHealth: “When to Go to the ER if Your Child Has Asthma.”

St. Louis Children’s Hospital: “Asthma Can Be Controlled.”

DC Asthma Action Plan.

National Asthma Council Australia: “First Aid for Asthma.”

Handal, K. The American Red Cross First Aid and Safety Handbook, Little, Brown and Company, 1992.

Institute for Clinical Systems Improvement: “Emergency and Inpatient Management of Asthma Emergency Room Management.”

eMedicineHealth: “Asthma in Children.”

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