What parents can be told unequivocally is that antipyretic treatment, even when used in the first place, does not prevent febrile convulsions! This is proven by the results of numerous studies. Some parents will say that we sometimes have no seizures when we actively reduce fever. In fact, as already mentioned, even children with febrile convulsions do not have them every time they have a fever, so it is not the increase in body temperature that directly causes the occurrence of convulsions. If an individual child, indeed, has a seizure every time he has a fever, he should be highly alert to the fact that it is not a febrile convulsion, but some serious early manifestation of epilepsy, such as severe myoclonic epilepsy in infants (Dravet syndrome). Moreover, the nation often overuses antipyretic drugs, in fact, serious adverse reactions to such drugs are not uncommon, and the fever itself is only a protective response of the body to infection and a sign of serious inflammatory disease. Unless the fever is super high leading to heatstroke, most of the time, antipyretic treatment is only able to make people comfortable and does not have any positive therapeutic effect.