CART FREE HEALTHBEAT SIGNUP SHOP ▼ SIGN IN
What can we help you ᜟ�nd?
HEART HEALTH
MIND & MOOD
PAIN
STAYING
HEALTHY
CANCER
DISEASES & MEN'S HEALTH CONDITIONS
WOMEN'S
HEALTH
Normal Body Temperature : Rethinking the normal human body
temperature
The 98.6° F "normal" benchmark for body temperature comes to us from Dr. Carl Wunderlich, a 19th-century German physician who collected
and analyzed over a million armpit temperatures for 25,000 patients. Some of Wunderlich's observations have stood up over time, but his
deᜟ�nition of normal has been debunked, says the April issue of the Harvard Health Letter
{http://www.health.harvard.edu/newsletters/Harvard_Health_Letter.htm}. A study published years ago in the Journal of the American Medical
Association found the average normal temperature for adults to be 98.2°, not 98.6°, and replaced the 100.4° fever mark with fever thresholds
based on the time of day.
Now, researchers at Winthrop University Hospital in Mineola, N.Y., have found support for another temperature truism doctors have long
recognized: Older people have lower temperatures. In a study of 150 older people with an average age of about 81, they found that the average
temperature never reached 98.6°. These ᜟ�ndings suggest that even when older people are ill, their body temperature may not reach levels that
people recognize as fever. On the other hand, body temperatures that are too low (about 95°) can also be a sign of illness.
The bottom line is that individual variations in body temperature should be taken into account, reports the Harvard Health Letter. Ideally, you and
your doctor should have enough temperature measurements at various times of day to establish a baseline for you. Short of this, recognize that
98.6° isn't the benchmark that we've long believed it to be.
To continue reading this article, you must login
{http://www.health.harvard.edu/login}.
Subscribe to Harvard Health Online for immediate access to health
news and information from Harvard Medical School.
Research health conditions
Check your symptoms
Prepare for a doctor's visit or test
Find the best treatments and
procedures for you
Explore options for better nutrition
and exercise
I'd like to receive access to
Harvard Health Online for only
$4.99 a month.
Learn more about the many
bene ts and features of joining
Harvard Health Online »
{http://www.health.harvard.edu/promotions/harvardhealth-publications/harvardhealth-online}
Sign Me Up »
Home Sign up for HEALTHbeat Subscribe Special Health Reports Subscriptions Customer Service About Us Licensing/Permissions Privacy Policy
© 2010 2016 Harvard University. All rights reserved.
© Copyright 2026 Paperzz