Prepare: Watch Out for Fever
If you get a fever during your chemotherapy treatment, it’s a medical emergency. Fever may be the only sign that you have an infection, and an infection during chemotherapy can be life-threatening.
You should take your temperature any time you feel warm, flushed, chilled, or not well. If you have a fever, call your doctor right away, even if it happens in the middle of the night. You should also—
- Find out from your doctor when your white blood cell count is likely to the be the lowest, since this is when you’re most at risk for infection.
- Keep a working thermometer in a convenient location and know how to use it.
- Keep your doctor’s phone numbers with you at all times. Make sure you know what number to call when their office is open and closed.
- If you have to go to the emergency room, tell the person checking you in that you are a cancer patient undergoing chemotherapy. If you have a fever, you might have an infection. This is a life-threatening condition, and you should be seen quickly.
- Page last reviewed: February 24, 2014
- Page last updated: November 18, 2015
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