Whether a child is hot on the body but not on the forehead is a fever or not depends on what the true measured temperature is; a measured temperature of ≥37.4°C is considered feverish. Children who are wearing too much clothing may show a hotter body, but the forehead is bare and usually may not be hot, which is a normal phenomenon. There are also cases when the body is hot due to overheated ambient temperatures and when the body is overdressed, but there is no sweating, and the forehead is also outside, and when there is sweating it lowers the temperature of the surface of the forehead, neither of which is considered a fever. Whether the child has a fever or not should be based on the real measured temperature. If it is only caused by overdressing or overheating of the environment, you can lower the temperature of the environment or reduce the wearing of clothes, and at the same time drink more water, the temperature can be lowered to normal, which does not belong to a fever.