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Guide · Children's health

RSV & Bronchiolitis in Babies — Irish Parent Guide

RSV bronchiolitis is the most common serious respiratory illness in babies in Ireland. Here is what to recognise, when to worry, and how it is treated.

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What is RSV bronchiolitis?

Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) is the most common cause of bronchiolitis — an inflammation of the small airways (bronchioles) in babies. It is the leading cause of hospital admission for respiratory illness in Irish under-1s, peaking in autumn and winter. Almost all children will have had at least one RSV infection by age 2.

In older children and adults, RSV usually causes only cold-like symptoms. In babies — particularly under 6 months — the small airways become inflamed and clogged with mucus, making feeding and breathing harder work.

Typical course

  • Days 1-3: cold-like symptoms — runny nose, mild cough, sometimes mild fever
  • Days 3-5: cough becomes worse; wheeze may appear; faster breathing; feeding difficulty
  • Days 5-7: typically the most difficult phase
  • Days 7-14: gradual improvement; cough may persist for 2-3 weeks

Most babies recover at home with supportive care.

When to seek same-day or emergency care

Call 999/112 or attend emergency immediately for any of these red flags per NICE CKS:

  • Severe difficulty breathing — sucking in at the ribs, neck, or above the breastbone
  • Breathing very fast or grunting with each breath
  • Pauses in breathing (apnoeas)
  • Bluish lips, tongue, or face
  • Very floppy, unresponsive, or extremely drowsy
  • Unable to feed (taking less than half normal feeds for 2-3 feeds)
  • Dry nappies for over 12 hours (dehydration)

Seek same-day in-person review if your baby:

  • Is under 3 months old with any concern about breathing
  • Is breathing faster than usual or working harder to breathe
  • Has high fever
  • Has reduced feeds (but not severely)
  • Was born premature or has chronic lung/heart conditions
  • Is generally unwell in a way that concerns you

Home management for mild bronchiolitis

  • Smaller, more frequent feeds — your baby may tire halfway through a feed
  • Keep your baby upright when feeding
  • Saline nasal drops before feeds can help clear blocked noses
  • Paracetamol (age-appropriate paediatric dose) if febrile and uncomfortable — only for babies over 2 months and follow product labelling carefully
  • No smoking in the home
  • Monitor breathing and feeding

Important: cough/cold over-the-counter medications are not safe for under-6s. Honey is not safe for under-1s. Steroids and bronchodilators (inhalers) are generally not effective for bronchiolitis — different from asthma.

Prevention

  • Hand washing — single most effective measure
  • Avoid sick contacts where possible, particularly in the first 3 months
  • Breastfeeding provides some protective benefit
  • Avoid smoke exposure
  • Nirsevimab (Beyfortus) — passive immunisation now offered to eligible infants in Ireland per HSE National Immunisation Office. Significantly reduces severe RSV in the first season. Check current HSE eligibility
  • Maternal RSV vaccine — offered in pregnancy in some scenarios to protect newborns

Online Doctor consultation

For babies with cold symptoms but not unwell-looking, an Online Doctor can advise on monitoring and red flags. For any breathing concern, faster-than-usual breathing, reduced feeds, or significant illness — particularly in babies under 3 months — in-person assessment is the right pathway. Bronchiolitis is one condition where being cautious about in-person review is wise.

Sources: HSE.ie, NICE CKS Bronchiolitis, HSE National Immunisation Office, Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. General information only — for any breathing concern in an infant, seek in-person assessment.

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Most under-1 illness

Bronchiolitis (mostly RSV) is the leading cause of hospital admission in under-1s in Ireland in winter.

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Supportive care

No specific antiviral; treatment is feeding support, fluids, oxygen if needed.

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Prevention available

Nirsevimab passive immunisation now offered to at-risk infants in Ireland per HSE.

Frequently asked questions

How is RSV different from a cold?
RSV often starts like a cold but in babies progresses to bronchiolitis — inflammation of the small airways causing wheeze, cough, and feeding difficulty. In older children and adults RSV usually stays as just a cold.
Can I get an RSV vaccine for my baby?
Per HSE National Immunisation Office, nirsevimab (a long-acting antibody, not a vaccine) is offered to eligible infants in Ireland. A maternal RSV vaccine is also offered in some scenarios during pregnancy. Eligibility evolves — check current HSE guidance.
Will my baby need to be hospitalised?
Most babies recover at home. Around 2-3% are admitted, usually for feeding support, monitoring, or oxygen. Babies who are admitted typically recover quickly.
Does my baby need antibiotics?
No — bronchiolitis is viral and antibiotics do not help. Antibiotics are reserved for confirmed bacterial secondary infections (uncommon).
Can I give my baby an inhaler?
Per NICE, bronchodilators and steroids are not effective for typical bronchiolitis. If your baby has a separate asthma diagnosis with prescribed inhalers, follow that plan separately.
How long does the cough last?
The acute illness usually peaks at 5-7 days. A residual cough commonly continues for 2-3 weeks and is not concerning if your baby is otherwise well, feeding fine, and breathing comfortably.

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