Also, the app could support an educational component: "You should see your doctor because diagnosis and testing may be more involved based on the evaluation of a trained professional. Some ear infections may surgery, while others may not even require antibiotics. See your doctor."
Absolutely not. Kids age < 4 get these all the time. When they cry or feel bad, you don't know if you want to go to doctor all the time. For poor people this is even more difficult decision. Ear infections when treated early can be much less painful or even dangerous. This kind of apps is definitely useful.
> For poor people this is even more difficult decision.
Depends where you live. In The Netherlands I get the doctor visits for my toddler reimbursed by (mandatory) insurance. My problem is rather that I need to make (precious) time for a doctor visit. Time is money.
Eh, thanks for that (offensive) question, you're the first in my life who ever asked me that question. It is a good question though, so I'll address it (from my PoV, n=1).
First of all, every parent in the world has this problem because as parent your time is limited. More so than non parents. There are some parents who outsource their children to (day)care. We don't have the financial means for that, but we'd also limit it regardless because contact with our child is important.
Second, yes I've been wondering about that various times in the recent past, but for very different reasons (I have autism and get over-sensitized from children because of the unpredictability and the noise).
Third, you don't know beforehand the exact problems you're going to face with your child. Not from your part, but even less from your child's PoV because you don't know how their personality is and how it is going to develop. Furthermore, you don't know for sure how your situation and the world is going to develop.
Money and time are both limiting factors. While in The Netherlands the doctor visits are reimbursed via insurance, the limiting time factor remains.
I would make time for my kid when required. The problem is that you never know for sure when it is required. Because you don't know for sure when your kid is really ill. Its a risk assessment, in the end. Right now, she has the sixth disease (Roseola) which is the first time she got really ill, and it seems like a harmless virus.
I am not a medical professional, so I may be getting some details wrong, but my understanding is that many pediatricians over-prescribe antibiotics for ear-infections (sometimes due to demands of the parents), and having additional information may help in this regard.
Over-prescribing antibiotics is bad because (1) some children have serious allergic reactions to them (and sometimes these develop over time), (2) they contribute to the evolution of antibiotic resistance.
It's not necessary to diagnose it until several days have passed.
That's not to say just ignore the earache, but you don't have to go to the doctor to get a diagnosed for couple days. Only if it's still there after a couple days then go.
Here (Slovenia) you get told off severely if you don't come immediately when the pain starts. And if there's no pain but you feel a fluid buildup, you're supposed to get checked regularly until it subsides (am currently in that state, non-infected fluid buildup in my ear after a viral infection).
Please don't make personal attacks in HN comments, regardless of how wrong some other commenter is. They break the site guidelines and ruin the informational value of what you're saying. Your comment would have been just fine without the first and fourth paragraphs.
In general we can't, because neither users nor moderators are in a position to judge bad medical advice.
There are genuine medical experts on HN, but they only pop up occasionally.