https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/med...SAz?li=BBnb7Kz
From the Wall St. Jour. 
Across the country, the litmus test for many children’s entry into  school, athletics and extracurricular activities, is their temperature.  But experts and medical groups increasingly say that isn’t a good gauge  of Covid-19 as many infected children and adults don’t get fevers.  Furthermore, variability in individual temperatures, as well as  questions about the accuracy of body-temperature scanners and infrared  contact-free thermometers, put such checks at risk of potential error.
In  some cases, parents are taking their children’s temperatures so often  that doctors say they are diagnosing more cases of periodic fever  syndrome than usual. Periodic fever syndromes are autoinflammatory  disorders in which children have recurrent episodes of fever and other  symptoms. Though the genetic conditions are considered rare, doctors say  they often go undiagnosed.
In other cases, doctors have been  stumped by parents who say their otherwise healthy children have had  low-grade temperatures for months, unclear if it is connected to an  undiagnosed, asymptomatic Covid-19 case or not.
A U.S. Centers of  Disease Control and Prevention study of nearly 300 children with  Covid-19 found that 56% had a fever. Its current guidance for school  reopenings recommends against symptom screening for Covid-19. The  American Academy of Pediatrics’ interim guidance on school reopenings  similarly doesn’t recommend universal temperature checks. 
“Thinking  that you have done enough by simply screening a child for a temperature  is one of those things that we felt created potentially a false sense  of security for schools,” says Nathaniel Beers, a pediatrician at  Children’s National Hospital in Washington, who co-chaired the committee  that drafted the guidance. 
   
 Doctors say baseline temperature varies depending on age, gender and  other factors. Temperatures also fluctuate throughout the day based on a  person’s circadian rhythm.
Doctors define a normal temperature as  98.6 degrees Fahrenheit and a fever as 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit or  higher based on an 1868 study by German researcher Carl Reinhold August  Wunderlich. But researchers such as Philip Mackowiak, an emeritus  professor of medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine,  have questioned the research and published studies showing the average  human temperature may be slightly lower and vary based on gender, age  and time of day. Wunderlich “had a massive database but he didn’t  publish his calculations,” Dr. Mackowiak says. “His thermometers  calibrated higher than current thermometers. And yet that’s a number we  still look to as a definition of the lower limits of the febrile range.”
An  adult’s temperature varies by on average one degree Fahrenheit over the  course of a day, though for some it can be several degrees, says Dr.  Mackowiak who published a 1992 study in JAMA demonstrating this. Similar  findings have been published by researchers at Stanford and Harvard. 
Dr. Mackowiak’s study found from a population-level standpoint that oral temperatures peak in the evening at 99.9 degrees. 
Similarly,  a 2018 study in the Journal of General Internal Medicine crowdsourced  oral temperatures from 329 participants using a smartphone app and found  that average oral temperatues were 97.7 degrees and a fever was defined  as 99.5 or higher. Temperatures varied throughout the day and were  affected by gender and age.
Most studies have focused on adults,  not children, so the normal range of temperature in children remains  unknown, says Julie Parsonnet, who specializes in infectious diseases at  Stanford University. Dr. Parsonnet was the senior author of a study  published this year that found the average adult’s body temperature is  about 97.5 degrees.
Every morning Jenny Martin takes her daughter  Sloane’s temperature and types the number into a health survey on her  phone. Before Sloane enters her second-grade classroom, she is checked  again by a teacher using a contactless forehead thermometer.
“We  just keep a thermometer right by her toothbrush and it’s part of the  daily routine now,” Ms. Martin says. Sloane, who is 8 years old,  returned to her private school in Boca Raton, Fla., three weeks ago.  “We’re aware that a fever is no longer the first indicator of Covid or  the be-all and end-all, but it’s something.”
Dr. Mackowiak says  infrared thermometers usually held near the forehead are problematic  because they aren’t standardized and their temperature readings can be  affected by sweat, makeup on the forehead or even the time of day.
The  focus on temperature has led to two perplexing phenomena, say some  pediatric rheumatologists in the Northeast. They say they are seeing an  uptick in children with recurrent low-grade fevers and those with new  diagnoses of periodic fever syndromes. 
Jonathan S. Hausmann, a  pediatric and adult rheumatologist at Boston Children’s Hospital and  Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, runs an auto-inflammatory disease  clinic that is seeing more patients. He says people are more closely  monitoring changes in temperature due to fears of Covid-19, so  previously undiagnosed children with periodic fever syndrome are  surfacing. Before the pandemic, parents may have attributed fevers to  other viral infections. But with children exposed to fewer other people  now, parents are noticing periodic fevers more.
“It’s not that  these are becoming more frequent,” Dr. Hausmann says. “We’re recognizing  them more readily because everyone’s concerned about fevers.” 
Beth  Gottlieb, head of pediatric rheumatology at Cohen Children’s Medical  Center in New Hyde Park, N.Y., says she has observed the same,  particularly for PFAPA—Periodic Fever, Aphthous Stomatitis, Pharyngitis,  Adenitis—a type of periodic fever syndrome that often affects children  under age 5. “We’re seeing a sudden surge of these kids,” Dr. Gottlieb  says. “Typically we don’t see a lot of them, maybe once a month. I’ve  had six of them in the last month or two.”
For many genetic  syndromes, people have an underlying predisposition for the condition  but an environmental factor—which could be anything from a virus to  stress—may trigger the disease. 
Separately Dr. Gottlieb says she  has seen more parents coming in with children who have consistent  low-grade fevers. If a child is otherwise normal and happy she advises  parents to stop taking their temperature. “This may be their normal body  temperature based on the rhythm of the day,” she says.
Philip  Kahn, an associate professor and pediatric rheumatologist at NYU Langone  Medical Center, also has observed a number of otherwise healthy  children who have a daily recurrent fever. “Previously I might have seen  a kid like this once every three or four years,” he says. He has seen  13 since May. None of the children reported having Covid-19 though they  may have had asymptomatic cases. They had negative antibody tests though  such checks aren’t always reliable. One possibility is that the  elevated temperatures are an aftereffect of Covid-19. Another  possibility, says Dr. Kahn, is that the shutdown—which meant more time  indoors and less outside—led to changes in some children’s bodies.
While  touchless thermometers are handy, the most accurate thermometers are  oral ones, experts say, which should be used at home. 
Ear  thermometers are at greater risk of user error—and wax or other  blockages may affect their accuracy, says Nathaniel Beers, a  pediatrician at Children’s National Hospital in Washington. Readings  from a forehead thermometer that touches the skin can be thrown off by a  person’s activity or blood flow to the forehead.
Axillary  temperatures, which are taken in the armpit, are generally a degree  lower so one degree should be added to the reading. Temperatures taken  with a rectal thermometer are slightly higher than oral temperatures but  typically used only with infants.
Dr. Beers says thermometers’  accuracy decreases with use and different thermometers have different  lifespans. People should regularly check the accuracy of their  thermometers and not assume they still work.
Write to Sumathi Reddy at 
sumathi.reddy@wsj.com 
Seems i remember 'a' absolutely refusing to back down that a person's temperature of 103 deg. is 'diagnostic' of wuhan virus. 
from an elitist, entitled DPST stuck in One's own 'Rightness' - and incapable of admitting error.  From One who never made a 'diagnosis' in One's limited life. 
typical - 'a' - DPST denial, deflection, and propaganda , and lies 
It won't Win in Nov 3, 2020!