Patient : My daughter is a little over 7 days old today. When the doctor measured the bilirubin value of 13.6 outside the skin a little more than three days ago, he asked for a hospitalization certificate for the baby and said to go to the blue light treatment, at that time I carried the baby to the pediatric department to have the blood type and blood tissue cells tested, ruled out hemolytic jaundice, and the DEL was 0.021. The bilirubin was 14.4 on the fourth day, 15.7 on the fifth day, 15.3 on the sixth day, and was discharged from the hospital. For four days in a row, the neonatologist said to go to the hospital for blue light and injections, but I felt that the child was too young and suffered too much, and I thought the hospital had obvious signs of ripping us off, so I refused, but I was still unsure, so I had liver function tests done before discharge yesterday, and the report data are as follows: Glutathione aminotransferase: 20.7 Glutathione aminotransferase: 25.0 Glutamyl transpeptidase: 80.4 Alkaline phosphatase. 167 Total protein: 55.3 Albumin: 37.7 Globulin: 17.6 Albumin-to-globulin ratio: 2.14 Total bilirubin: 246.8 Direct bilirubin: 14.2 Total bile acids: 22.90 Cholinesterase: 5756 Please consult with experts and knowledgeable moms. Personally, I’m thinking of waiting until my child is 14 days old to have a checkup based on the experience of the old man and the two medicines prescribed by the doctor, because my child’s limbs are normal and her diet is normal except for her yellow face and torso. I’d like to add that my child was born by cesarean section and breastfed, so the fetal stool came down late, about 13 hours after delivery, less than the third day, the fetal stool was finished. Now the stool is golden yellow. (There is no need to list the answers to the knowledge about neonatal jaundice because I have personally mastered some of them, that is, I hope that experienced people will give some advice and guidance.) Li Xueying : Intervention was performed on term infants >220.6 mmol/L. In China, there were observations reported that jaundice below 256.5 umol/L without obvious other pathological signs was not treated and no nuclear jaundice occurred. What bilirubin value is reached as the standard of intervention? How to eliminate over- and under-treatment? It still needs to be developed on the basis of a large epidemiological survey. Your baby’s total bilirubin: 246.8 is pathological jaundice by our standards and should be treated to prevent the development of nuclear jaundice. Of course, no one can be sure that nuclear jaundice will occur without treatment at this time. Daily transcutaneous bilirubin measurements are recommended to detect the development of bilirubin and to observe the general condition of the child. For example, reactions, muscle tone, movement, sucking, crying, etc.