Liquid Dosing Accuracy Four-Times Better With Oral Syringes – Study

Pediatric OTC and Rx dosage errors reach 43% for parents using a dosing cup but 16.7% with a 0.2 mL oral syringe, according to researchers who say recommending oral syringes over cups, particularly for small doses, should be part of a comprehensive pediatric labeling and dosing strategy.

Pediatric dosing safety, mother and child

Researchers question the accuracy of dosing using cups commonly included with liquid drugs after finding 84% of parents measure the wrong amount of medicine and are four times more likely with cups than syringes to dose inaccurately.

The percentage of attempts with errors per parent when using a cup reached 43%, but 16.7% with a 0.2mL syringe...

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Pink Sheet for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Drug Safety

CAR-T REMS Removal Should Boost Access, But Long-Term Follow-Up, Black Box Remain

 

The REMS removal and labeling changes should open up CAR-T treatment to many more US patients, although other regulatory hurdles and safety language that experts had wanted removed still stand.

US CDC Vaccine Committee Revives Thimerosal Debate: A Portent Of Things To Come?

 

The new Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted for new recommendations on the decades-old thimerosal safety issue and lays intellectual groundwork to revisit other past controversies and decisions.

ACIP Members ‘Not Easy’ To Find After Clean Sweep, US CDC Director Nominee Says

 
• By 

The CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices had only seven members in place as it met for the first time since HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. dismissed the previous panelists. CDC Director nominee Susan Monarez said finding replacements has been difficult.

Semaglutide: EMA Safety Probe Confirms Rare Eye Disorder Risk

 

The EU product information for Novo Nordisk’s semaglutide medicines is to be updated to include non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy as a side effect with a frequency of “very rare.”

More from Pink Sheet

New EFPIA President Hopes ‘Sanity Will Prevail’ In EU Pharma Reform Dialogs

 

Stefan Oelrich, the newly-announced president of European pharma industry federation EFPIA says the EU pharma reform is “not an improvement on the status quo” in its current form.

UK Pilots Faster Setup Of Early Phase Oncology Trials

 
• By 

Oncology trial sponsors in the UK are being invited to participate in a pilot that aims to tackle duplication and variation in pharmacy reviews, which are an important part of setting up clinical trials in the National Health Service.

US CDC Vaccine Committee Revives Thimerosal Debate: A Portent Of Things To Come?

 

The new Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted for new recommendations on the decades-old thimerosal safety issue and lays intellectual groundwork to revisit other past controversies and decisions.