Urgent care · evaluated online

Stomach flu (gastroenteritis)

Most stomach flu clears in 1–3 days with fluids and rest. A clinician can help with anti-nausea medication, monitor for dehydration, and tell you when symptoms suggest something else.

Licensed clinicians · Clinicians licensed in all 50 states
Stomach flu (viral gastroenteritis)
Hydration guidanceAvoid the dreaded IV
Anti-nausea RxOndansetron when needed
Common Rx
Ondansetron (Zofran) if needed
Time to feel better
1–3 days
Contagious
Very
Telehealth fit
Excellent fit

What is stomach flu?

"Stomach flu" is a misnomer — it's not influenza, but viral gastroenteritis, an inflammation of the stomach and intestines from viruses like norovirus, rotavirus, or adenovirus. Sudden vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal cramps, and sometimes low-grade fever and body aches define it.

Most healthy adults recover in 1–3 days. The main risk is dehydration, especially in young children, older adults, and those with chronic conditions.

Norovirus is the most common cause of adult viral gastroenteritis in the US, infamous for outbreaks on cruise ships, in nursing homes, and at family gatherings. It's extremely contagious — surfaces, food, and droplets all transmit it.

Do I have stomach flu? Common signs

If most of these describe what you're experiencing, telehealth is a reasonable next step:

Nausea and vomiting Watery diarrhea Abdominal cramps Low-grade fever Body aches Headache Loss of appetite Mild dehydration (dry mouth, less urination)
Here's how it actually works
01
Tell us what's going on5-minute online intake covers your symptoms, history, and any photos.
02
A clinician reviewsLicensed in your state. Reviews your case and asks anything needed.
03
Rx to your pharmacyIf treatment is appropriate, the prescription goes to the pharmacy you choose.

What causes it

Norovirus is responsible for most adult viral gastroenteritis in the US. Other viruses include rotavirus (more often kids), adenovirus, astrovirus, and sapovirus. Transmission is fecal-oral — contaminated food, water, surfaces, or person-to-person. Outbreaks are common in close-contact settings.

Non-viral causes that may look similar: bacterial food poisoning (Salmonella, E. coli, Campylobacter), parasitic infections (giardia), food intolerance, and inflammatory bowel disease flares.

Is it contagious?

Yes — norovirus especially. You're contagious during the illness and for several days after symptoms resolve. Tiny amounts of virus are infectious. Hand washing with soap and water (alcohol sanitizer is less effective against norovirus), cleaning surfaces with bleach-based products, and avoiding food preparation for others until 2 days symptom-free reduce spread.

Small, frequent sips beat large gulps — your stomach can usually handle a teaspoon every few minutes when nothing else stays down.

Can it be treated online?

Telehealth handles stomach flu well. A clinician assesses dehydration, rules out red flags (severe abdominal pain, bloody diarrhea, high fever, signs of intestinal blockage), and provides guidance on oral rehydration. Anti-nausea medication like ondansetron (Zofran) can be prescribed when vomiting prevents fluid intake — this often keeps people out of the ER for IV fluids.

How stomach flu is treated

Fluid replacement is the cornerstone: small, frequent sips of oral rehydration solution (Pedialyte) or clear electrolyte drinks. Avoid plain water exclusively — you need sodium and glucose for absorption.

Ondansetron (Zofran): a sublingual anti-nausea medication that can stop vomiting and let you keep fluids down. Often prescribed by telehealth.

Loperamide (Imodium): can be used for adult viral diarrhea after the first day or so. Avoid in bloody diarrhea or significant fever (may worsen bacterial colitis).

Antibiotics: generally NOT for viral gastroenteritis. Considered only when bacterial cause is suspected.

Self-care while you wait

When to skip telehealth and seek emergency care Signs of severe dehydration (no urination for 12+ hours, severe dizziness on standing, confusion), bloody or black stools, severe abdominal pain or a tender hard belly, high fever (above 102°F), vomiting blood, persistent vomiting unable to keep any fluids down for 24+ hours, neurologic symptoms, or symptoms in immunocompromised patients or pregnant patients — go to ER or urgent care.

How long does it last?

Most healthy adults recover in 1–3 days. Some viral causes (like norovirus) can last up to a week. If diarrhea lasts more than a week, or is accompanied by significant blood, weight loss, or systemic symptoms, get in-person evaluation — could be a different process.

Frequently asked questions

How do I know if I'm dehydrated?

Dry mouth, decreased urination, dark concentrated urine, dizziness on standing, lethargy, increased heart rate. Severe dehydration warrants ER evaluation.

When should I take Zofran?

Ondansetron is most useful when vomiting prevents you from holding down fluids. A sublingual dose 30 minutes before trying fluids often lets you keep liquids down.

Can I take Imodium for stomach flu diarrhea?

For uncomplicated viral diarrhea in adults, loperamide can help. Avoid if you have bloody diarrhea, high fever, or are immunocompromised — could worsen bacterial colitis.

Why is my whole family getting sick?

Norovirus is extremely contagious and spreads fast in households. Aggressive hand washing, surface disinfection with bleach products, and avoiding shared food preparation help.

Is it stomach flu or food poisoning?

Both look similar. Food poisoning often presents more acutely (within hours of eating) and may involve everyone who shared the meal. Bacterial food poisoning may have more blood in stool or higher fever. Often, treatment is similar — supportive care.

This page is for general information only — not a substitute for individual medical advice. A licensed clinician reviews every intake submitted through PrescriberNow before any prescription is issued. If you're experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.

Can't stop throwing up? Get help.

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