Digital Thermometer Guide: Types, Accuracy, and How to Use Them
Share
Kapag may lagnat ang bata mo sa gabi, ang huling gusto mong gawin ay maghanap ng instructions. Here’s everything you need to know about home thermometers — types, accuracy, fever thresholds, and how to use each correctly.
Types of Digital Thermometers
Used orally, rectally, or underarm. Most precise: ±0.1°C. Takes 30–60 seconds. Best when maximum precision matters. Comes with a clear hard case for storage and hygiene.
Scans the temporal artery. Quick (1–3 seconds), non-contact. Accuracy: ±0.2–0.3°C. Affected by sweating and cold exposure. Great for quick checks on sleeping children.
Measures infrared from eardrum, reflecting core body temperature. Fast (1–2 seconds). Accuracy: ±0.2°C. Not suitable for newborns (ear canal too narrow) or when ears are infected.
Combines forehead (adult), ear, child/pediatric forehead, and object/environment modes in one device. Comes with a carrying pouch. The object mode doubles as a milk and food temperature checker — useful for parents. One device covers the whole family.
BeHealthy 4-in-1 Digital Thermometer — ₱950
Four measurement modes in one device: forehead (adult), ear, child/pediatric forehead, and object/environment. FDA-registered with instant results and a clear backlit display. Includes a carrying pouch. Safe for newborns through elderly adults. Results in under 2 seconds.
Which Mode Is Most Accurate?
-
1Rectal — gold standard clinically (not practical for home use)
-
2Ear (tympanic) — excellent, reflects core temperature accurately
-
3Oral — very accurate when done correctly with mouth closed (pencil type)
-
4Forehead (temporal) — convenient but sensitive to sweating, cold exposure, and technique
-
5Underarm (axillary) — reads 0.5–1°C lower than true temperature; add 0.5°C for estimate (pencil type only)
Fever Thresholds by Age
| Age Group | Fever Threshold | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Under 3 months | 38°C | Seek care immediately — all fevers in newborns are urgent |
| 3–6 months | 38.5°C+ | Seek care if above 39°C or looks unwell |
| 6 months–2 years | 38.5°C+ | Seek care if above 40°C or persists 48h+ |
| 3–17 years | 38.5°C+ | Seek care if above 40°C, seizure, or stiff neck |
| Adults | 38°C+ | Seek care if above 39.5°C with severe symptoms |
| Over 65 | 37.8°C+ | Lower threshold — elderly immune response may be blunted |
Tips for Accurate Readings
Wipe sweat first. Hold at correct distance (1–3cm). Wait 30 minutes after outdoor exposure. Take 2–3 readings and use the highest.
Pull ear back-and-up for adults, back-and-down for children under 2. Insert snugly, pointing slightly forward toward the eye.
Designed for smaller bodies with adjusted normal range. Hold close to the forehead of the child. Works while the child is asleep — no contact needed.
Under the tongue, mouth closed. Wait 30 minutes after eating, drinking, or physical activity. Do not use orally on young children.
Frequently Asked Questions
Forehead readings can underread when taken incorrectly or when the forehead is sweaty. Switch to ear mode to confirm. Always take 2–3 readings and use the highest.
No — the BeHealthy 4-in-1 is designed for non-contact and ear measurement. Its four modes are forehead (adult), ear, child/pediatric forehead, and object/environment. For underarm measurement, a standard contact digital (pencil type) thermometer is needed.
It measures the surface temperature of objects — ideal for checking milk, formula, bathwater, or room temperature. Useful for parents of newborns who need to ensure feeding temperatures are safe (ideal bottle temperature: 37°C).
Fever itself is a normal immune response — the concerning element is what’s causing it and who has it. A 38.5°C fever in a 2-month-old is very different from the same reading in a healthy adult. Always consider the full clinical picture.