Home Treatment
Children with
mumps should not go to school, day care, or public
places until 9 days after the
salivary glands first start to swell.
It is not generally necessary to separate a child from the family,
because by the time mumps is diagnosed, most household members have already
been exposed.
If you or your child has mumps:
- Use
acetaminophen for fever or headache. Do not give
aspirin to anyone younger than 20 because its use has been linked to a
rare but serious illness called
Reye's syndrome.
- Place an ice or a heat
pack, whichever feels better, on the swollen jaw if there is pain from the
swelling. Place a light towel between the jaw and the ice pack or heat pack to
protect the skin. Remove the pack after 20 minutes.
- Place an ice
pack intermittently on tender testicles. Gentle support may also be comforting
and reduce swelling. See
how
to make and use an ice pack.
- Suck on ice chips or flavored
ice treats, such as Popsicles. Eat soft foods that do not require chewing.
- Do not eat sour foods or sour liquids. Because infected salivary
glands are extremely sensitive, it may be difficult to eat these foods.
If you or your child has mumps, call your local health department.
The health department needs to record all cases of the illness. If you visit
your doctor, he or she will report it for you.
Prevention
Before the mumps vaccine existed, mumps was a common childhood
disease in the United States. The mumps vaccine is now routinely given as part
of the
measles, mumps,
and rubella (MMR) vaccine
(What is a PDF document?). There is also a measles, mumps, rubella,
and varicella (MMRV) vaccine that includes a vaccine for chickenpox
(varicella). The MMRV vaccine is also called ProQuad and can be substituted for
either or both doses of MMR. For more information, see the topic
Immunizations.
The benefits of the MMR and MMRV vaccines far outweigh the
risks. But you may have concerns, such as:
Check your immunization status before you
travel to countries where mumps is common.