Hold your arm down tightly at your side.
Take temperature under arm baby.
Axillary or armpit temperature is the least accurate of the three.
Hold the baby s arm tightly in place so he cannot move it.
Squeeze your arm against your body to hold the thermometer in place.
Make sure that your baby s clothing doesn t get between the thermometer and the skin.
Put the end with the colored or silver tip under your arm.
Temperature taken under the arm usually is considered to be less accurate than most other body locations for measuring temperature.
Some babies don t mind having their temperature taken rectally while others seem to hate it.
An armpit temperature is generally 1 degree lower than an oral temperature.
If that reading is over 99 degrees fahrenheit take her rectal temperature for a more precise and accurate result.
Remove the thermometer when it signals that it s done and read the number.
If your baby protests you might want to take her underarm axillary temperature first.
Keep the thermometer under your arm for 5 minutes or longer.
To take a temporal temperature push down on the button to turn it on.
It can be nearly 2 degrees lower than a rectal temperature which is the most accurate.
Remove the thermometer without touching the tip.
Most digital thermometers emit a beep when finished taking the temperature reading.
This measurement also known as axillary temperature tends to be about half a degree to a degree below oral temperature 1.
If your child has been eating or drinking wait 15 minutes to take his or her temperature by mouth.
Make sure the thermometer is touching skin and not clothes.
Keep the thermometer in your armpit until it beeps.
To take an accurate axillary temperature the thermometer point must fit snugly into your baby s armpit.
To take an underarm temperature put the tip in your or your child s armpit.
Lift the baby s arm remove the thermometer and read the temperature.
Place the tip of the thermometer under your child s tongue toward the back of the mouth and ask your child to keep his or her lips closed.
To take your child s temperature.
A digital thermometer can take an oral rectal or axillary temperature.
A normal axillary temperature ranges between 97 6 degrees and 99 4 degrees fahrenheit according to the einstein healthcare network 1.
If you don t get a snug fit the reading you get will probably be too low.
Underarm temperature is considered the safest way to check the body temperature of children under 3 months old.
Swipe the thermometer from one temple to the other and behind the ear until it beeps.
The baby s skin should completely surround the thermometer.
Therefore normal axillary temperature would range between 97 6 degrees and 98 1 degrees fahrenheit 36 4 36 7 degrees celsius.