News 01/21/1992
P92-2 Food and Drug Administration
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Faye Peterson - (301) 827-6242
The Food and Drug Administration today warned parents against
inadvertent overdosing of children with liquid nonprescription medications
for colds and flu.
Dose cups often cap the bottles of these medications, providing a
convenient measure, but FDA cited instances in which parents either misread
the dose cup markings or misread the directions, providing children with
several times the recommended dosage.
Even seemingly small doses of the common painkiller acetaminophen -- if
over the recommended amount -- can be dangerous, if given over a period of
several days, FDA said.
"If the label says to give two teaspoons every four hours, that's the
amount the child should get at the prescribed intervals," said FDA
Commissioner David A. Kessler, M.D. He also urged parents to read
ingredient labels carefully, so they don't provide the same ingredient in
two medications.
"If the condition worsens or fails to improve, the child should be seen
by a physician," Dr. Kessler said. "If parents have any questions about the
proper dose of a medication, they should consult their pharmacist or
physician."
The FDA said these precautions are particularly pertinent now when
influenza is being reported nationwide in epidemic proportions.
The potential problem of accidentally overdosing children with
acetaminophen came to light when FDA received a report of a child who had
inadvertently been given three times the intended dose. The child's
parents, using a "dose cup" packaged with the drug, measured to the "two
tablespoon" level marked on the cup, instead of giving the "two teaspoon"
dose that was recommended in the drug's labeling. There was no "two
teaspoon" measurement on the cup.
In FDA's follow-up of this incident, additional reports of dosing errors
involving medicine cups began to surface. As a result, FDA began a survey
of OTC liquid medication makers to ensure that the labeling of all these
products is compatible with their dose cups and that the cups are easily
readable.
In cooperation with FDA, the Nonprescription Drug Manufacturers
Association and the Private Label Manufacturers Association (trade
organizations representing OTC drug manufacturers) have asked member and
non-member companies to review OTC liquid products packaged with dispensing
or dose cups and to take appropriate action based on FDA concerns.
Though no serious injuries have been reported involving dose cups, two
manufacturers have undertaken voluntary recalls of products packaged with
dose cups found to be incompatible with labeling instructions or of poor
quality.
The FDA is one of the eight Public Health Service agencies within HHS.
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