T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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131.1 | gotta love that pink stuff | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Thu May 21 1992 13:49 | 30 |
|
Ah yes, the horrid pink stuff that stains your entire house (not to
mention all of your clothing). Spencer is on it right now for a mild
ear infection (as is his Dad for the same complaint). Spencer hates,
it, spits and gags, just like any normal child would. (his Dad isn't
doing much better ;-) )
We have been able to hide the drug in his cereal during meals
(didn't work with just fruit, he could taste it and refused the food).
The problem with hiding it in food is that you have to make sure that
they finish all of the food, this can make for some rather looooong
dinner hours.
When no one has any patience, Marc holds Spencer's arms at his side
(while the baby is on his back) and I put the medicine in his mouth
with a dropper, of course Spencer usually cries and yells but this only
helps to get the medicine down. Often I will hold my finger between his
gums (and those two little razor teeth) so that he has to swallow (kind
of like giving a pill to a cat). When Spencer gets a cold he is usually
on 4 medications at one time, I must say that we have gotten pretty
good at this.
Giving medicine is no fun, there are usually tears and lots of hugs
afterwards, I just keep in mind what the consequences of *not* giving
him the medicine would be and it gives me greater resolve to do what
needs to be done.
Wendy
|
131.2 | do it herself? | CNTROL::STOLICNY | | Thu May 21 1992 13:57 | 10 |
|
A 17 month old *might* be convinced to take her medicine if she
were allowed to do it herself. This worked for us but our son
is rather independent and really into doing everything himself.
We use a medicine spoon - the kind with the hollow handle. Only
took him a couple of tries to do it well without spilling. He'll
even take those nasty infant vitamin drops if he can do it himself.
Just a thought,
Carol
|
131.3 | Try mixing with water.... | FUZZLE::ANDERSON | There's no such place as far away | Thu May 21 1992 14:02 | 26 |
| Russell (20 mo.) also hates tylenol, et.al. We had similar problems
where he will gag (and used to vomit) any type of medicine. We also
keep a supply of Feverall suppositories in the house, so I know how you
feel. Russell usually gets at least 2-3 ear infections a winter, so
we've been through the medicine bit.
Russell is wary of Robertussin, or Tynelol in his water or milk, but he
doesn't seem to mind us putting in the Sulfur he usually gets. Russ is
allergic to Penicillin, so he gets Sulfermethox(something) twice a day.
For a while, we would put the Sulfur in 1-2 oz. of water and get him to
take it before he had his morning bottle, and again before dinner. If
there was any left, we would mix it in with his normal bottle. Right
now he's on a preventive dose of the sulfur, and we just add it right
to his morning milk. I think he's just gotten used to it. My dr said
I could mix the medicine with milk, juice, whatever, so maybe you can
find something your daughter will take.
I've tried to give it to him straight, but it's too much of a struggle.
If you can get the dropper over to the side of their mouth, in deep
along the cheek, they are "forced" to swallow the stuff. But I usually
can't get him to sit still long enough for that.
Hope this helps...
marianne
|
131.4 | Try putting it in a drink | STOKES::GERRY | I have no idea | Thu May 21 1992 14:09 | 14 |
| Lisa,
I had the same problem with my son who had repeated ear infections for
a couple of years. He also spit his amoxicillin out (I don't blame
him-it tastes horrible), so since he is a chocolate milk lover I hid
his medication in a few tablespoons of his favorite drink. I added a
bit more chocolate than unsual to mask the taste. If your daughter
likes strawberry you could try Strawberry Quik. I have heard of people
trying pudding, ice cream and even Jello to "hide" it in, but I had
the most luck with the choc. milk.
Hope this helps!
Linda
|
131.5 | Finally got the hang of it. | EMDS::CUNNINGHAM | | Thu May 21 1992 14:21 | 12 |
|
Michael was sick for most of his 4-5th mos...one cold after another and
was on 4 different meds at one time (one being the awful "pink" stuff")
Seemed it would never end. He hated taking his meds, but there was no
choice, and we just had to hold him down and got for it.
Well, since that time, he now takes any meds like its candy! I guess
maybe having been on them for so long, he got used to it, and now no
longer complains. Thank god!
Chris
|
131.6 | | JUPITR::MAHONEY | Just another tricky day | Thu May 21 1992 15:00 | 11 |
| My daughter has had 3 ear infections since she turned a year old. She
is now 20 months. She had no problem taking the liquid amoxcicillan.
The 3rd time the doctor prescribed chewables, at 17 months she took
those just fine. My question for the basenoter, Does your child have
many teeth? If so the chewables may be the way to go. They are not that
hard and some kids prefer them over the liquid. Children associate
medicine with being liquid on a spoon. I just give Danielle a tablet
and she pops it right in her mouth and the job is done.
Sandy
|
131.7 | comment | SCAACT::DICKEY | Kathy | Thu May 21 1992 16:03 | 12 |
| I haven't read all the other replies, but the few times I have had
trouble getting Stephen (20 mo) to take his medicine, I have layed him
down and slid the dropper way back between his cheek and gum and give
it to him. After a few times doing this I can get it down him first
try. You have to be quick. The doctor told me if you do that, they
have to swollow it. Then I hand him some water to get the taste out of
his mouth and tell him what a big boy he is for taking his medicine.
Most of the time I am very fortunate and he will take it without any
problem. He really likes to take it himself.
Kathy
|
131.8 | syringe helped us | STUDIO::POIRIER | | Thu May 21 1992 17:22 | 17 |
| We experienced the same type of thing with Shannon -- she would not take
any oral medication. Not only would she fight, scream, spit it out,
she would vomit the entire contents of her stomach !!! We tried all
the above suggestions (different spoons, "hiding" etc. to no avail).
Finally, she had to take amoxicillin for an ear infection.
Luckily she was in the hospital when it was prescribed so I asked for
(and got) syringes to measure up the dose, and she seemed to do best
when she sat up, and I inserted the syringe to the side of her mouth
EVER SO SLOWLY while Dad encouraged from the sidelines!
I haven't had to give her any other medication since, but I have kept
those syringes for the future!
perhaps it is worth a try
-beth
|
131.9 | Another way | GANTRY::CHEPURI | Pramodini Chepuri | Thu May 21 1992 17:47 | 19 |
|
When my kids were little, I laid them on the diaper table and pressed
both cheeks with a hand to form an "O". Then, I poured the medicine
with a dropper or medicine spoon into the mouth and held the mouth
position until they took a big gulp. They need to gulp in order to
take a breath. I then gave them some water followed by a pinch of sugar.
The process might sound a little harsh, but it is swift. Adding it to
regular food ruins its taste and the kid knows about it anyway. My kids
only complained (spit, gag etc.) till the sugar. That seems to take
away the aftertaste. BTW, I myself wash down any medicine with water
and a pinch of sugar.
My 4-year old takes medicine with no problem at all. The 2-year old
can sometimes be fussy. When I cannot convince her, I still use the
above method.
Pam
|
131.10 | | GOOEY::ROLLMAN | | Fri May 22 1992 09:40 | 18 |
|
If they hate one antibiotic, they may love another. See if the doctor will try
changing to another one. (Elise hates amoxillin, but loves bactrim).
The lying down and pinching the cheeks works very well, but make sure the kid
knows the medicine is coming so they don't inhale. Use a dropper for this
method; you can control the flow better.
Also - try making stupid noises and pretending the spoon or dropper is an
airplane, etc. Most of the time they're so fascinated by the silly noises, they
open right up.
The only other thing I can say is that you have to choose your battles and
unfortunately, this is one you have to win. Just keep plugging away.
They figure out it's going to happen whether they like it or not, and actually
become a little more cooperative.
|
131.11 | A quick update from the basenoter... | NIODEV::MIDTTUN | Lisa Midttun,285-3450,NIO/N4,Pole H14-15 | Fri May 22 1992 10:28 | 19 |
| Thanks to all the parents who have replied! (I LOVE this notesfile!)
Yesterday, I printed out all the replies and discussed them with my
husband (he's the one who has to give 2 of the 3 daily doses by
himself). As we have already tried hiding medicines in juice, water,
applesauce, etc., we decided not to do that with the amoxicillin. As we
have always given her medication with a oversized medicine dropper, we
decided to try the 'between the cheek and gum' method described by 2
parents. The difference was that we used to just put the dropper way
back in her mouth on her tongue. Well, the new method worked GREAT!
Caroline still wasn't happy about been held still with her head slightly
back, but, after trying to wait as long as possible she did finally swallow.
There was only a minimum of tears as it was over so quickly. The 'pink
stuff' didn't get all over the 3 of us as she really couldn't spit it
out. We'll see if we all continue to do so well over the long weekend.
Now it makes me wonder if in addition to the taste or consistency of
the medicine, that the dropper on the back of the tongue might have
also contributed to her excellent gag reflex! Thanks so much for all
the tips and encouragement!
|
131.12 | Be careful what you hide it in! | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, Eur. Ext. Res. Prg., DTN 821-4022 | Fri May 22 1992 10:32 | 9 |
| I was severely anemic when I was in my teens and had to take an iron tonic
which tasted worse than awful. And I was reasonable, I knew I HAD to take it.
The doctor suggested putting it in orange juice which I did. To this day I
will seldom drink orange juice because it still tastes like that iron tonic.
Be sure you don't hide the medicine in something that you really want them to
like (like their milk :-).
ccb
|
131.13 | another method | CRONIC::ORTH | | Fri May 22 1992 13:54 | 19 |
| My sister works as an RN in Boston City Hospital, and gave us this tip
for kids who are still on a bottle. She said they rarely put meds in
the kids bottles or food, because then the kids *must* finish it all,
and that can be a worse battle than just swallowing the meds! What they
do is take a bottle nipple (nipple only, crosscut ones work the very
best), measure the meds into the nipple, and let the child suck it out
of the nipple. We put Jake on his back on the changing table, and tip
his head back ever so slightly, so that the nipple is level (otherwise
it runs out when they first start to suck on it). He was very surprised
by it the first time, but swallowed it without a fuss. Takes him 1 - 2
minutes, tops. Most "regular" nipples (as opposed to Playtex shape, or
orthodonitc ones) hold exactly 1 tsp. when filled level full, which is
most convenient! Oh, he was on Augmentin, not Amoxicillin. He's been
through Amoxi, Bactrim and Augmentin within 7 weeks, and still can't
seem to shake this ear infection. Not looking forward to the next ear
check, as I don't think the augmentin got rid of it either (he still
bangs his ears and pokes at them).
--dave--
|
131.14 | use 2 bottles | MEMIT::GIUNTA | | Fri May 22 1992 14:04 | 9 |
| Along the same lines of .13, if you want to put the medicine in the bottle,
just make 1 small bottle of say an ounce with the meds in it, and give that
to the baby first. Then give the rest of the formula separately. That way,
you don't have to worry about having the baby finish all the formula since
s/he's already gotten it all. They used to use that trick on my daughter
in the NICU since she didn't always finish her bottle, but we had to be sure
she was getting her meds. Finishing a bottle has never been a problem for my
son, so we could just put his medicine in a full bottle and be assured he
would drink it down.
|
131.15 | That's what I do ! | SUEWIT::RUBIN | | Tue May 26 1992 14:58 | 9 |
|
My 5 month old son has had TWO ear infections already, and he would not
take the medicine at all, so we gave it to him in his bottle, and we gave
him the bottle with the medicine first, and measured about 3 ounces in the
bottle to make sure that he would take it all, and be hungry enough so he would
not complain. I called the doctor on this, and he said that it was fine to
put it in the bottle, but he had to take the entire bottle. He seems to be
better, he just finished his 10 day supply
yesterday, and I am praying that he doesn't get it again!!
|
131.16 | | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Fri May 29 1992 10:43 | 4 |
| My 9 month old doesn't like medications either - we give Feverall
sprinkle caps mixed in food - you could try the amoxycillin that way.
|
131.17 | My son thinks its a treat!! | CSC32::L_WHITMORE | | Sat May 30 1992 17:52 | 21 |
| My son must have a strange sense of taste! He loves his liquid
vitamins and the amoxycillin!! I can't figure it out but I guess
I'm pretty lucky 'cuz he never puts up a fight. We give the medicine
to him with a dropper and he'll suck on it until he gets the last drop.
He seems to think it's a treat and I guess we kind of reinforce that by
saying things like "would you like to have some medicine now?"
I think in the future we'll have to be sure to make the distinction
between medicine and candy, but he's only 19 months old so for right
now we just let him think of it as a treat. And something else we do
is hold the bottle and let him dip the dropper into the bottle himself.
Then we help him fill it up and he puts it in his mouth by himself. We
do this at the kitchen table so if it dribbles the mess is easy to
clean up. I know when he was younger we had a struggle getting him to
take medicines like Tempra, and I'm not really sure when it changed -
I don;t recall doing anything specifically to get Matthew to take it
but I know we act like it's something really good (saying, uuummmmm,
and yummy) and he follows our lead! I don't know if this is of
any help to anyone!!! It works for us! Lila
|
131.18 | try a syringe and reasoning | AKOCOA::TRIPP | | Wed Jun 10 1992 14:29 | 28 |
| re: a few back, instead of just using the nipple, I had purchases a
nipple contraption before AJ was born. I think it held an ounce total
and had nipple that kind of stretched over the neck of this thing. I
think it was made by (oh good grief I can't remember the name) the
people who make baby things like the padded spoons, they use a blister
pack with a blue and white checked pattern on the card. For me it was
just short ofa miracle.
Second thing we did was to ask the pharmacist for a syringe without th
needle, some will, some won't it all depends on what kind of
relationship you have with the pharmacist, sometimes the pedi's office
can provide you with one, or a commercial one is sold with the medicine
droppers. FYI 5cc's equal a teaspoon, we still measure this way and
he's over 5 now.
We take a very "matter of fact" attitude when giving medicine, always
have. Here it is, not bribing nothing. I still maintain it's all in
the attitude. He may protest a little some of the extremely bad
tasting medicines (bendryl liquid aparently has a strong taste for
example) but will still take it. As he got older we explained that
this is the medicine that will make your "boo boo in your ear" or
whatever feel better. I guess he can be reasoned with, on occation.
Good luck, I do know this is not pleasant, especially when the poor
little guy doesn't feel good to start with.
Lyn
|
131.19 | reaction to Immodium AD | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Thu Jul 23 1992 14:39 | 25 |
| My daughter (21 months) just had a bad reaction to Immodium AD. I want
to let you know so that you are on the alert if this happens to your
child. I will tell the doctor's office next time I speak to them.
We gave her the dose (1/4 tsp) recommended by the doctor for persistent
diarhea.
It seemed to constrict her throat. She coughed a lot after taking it
and her breathing was somewhat labored. The first time this happened
she vomited after coughing awhile. The daycare provider got really
scared. I tried this medicine one more time and she had the same
reaction. After about an hour her breathing had improved enough that I
felt safer in putting her to bed. I checked her several times during
the night and she seemed fine.
We gave her Immodium AD last month without this bad reaction. It
really cought the poor daycare provider by surprise.
This reminds me of a similar reaction I had once to some artificially
sweetened hard candies. I have not reacted this way to Immodium AD,
though.
Now we are using Kaopectate for Ilona.
L
|
131.20 | No Immodium ever in our house ! | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Thu Jul 23 1992 17:49 | 12 |
| After seeing a program a year ago about the misuse of Immodium in
India and how it is supposed to work, I don't think that I would
use it for diahorrea. Basically the stuff slows the digestive tract
from working and inhibits muscular action along the digestive tract.
In India, because it's only available in adult formulation, kiddies
are often overdosed, and die because there digestive system totally
stops, leaving rotting food in the intestines. It is shocking.
Kaopectate is far preferable ... and in the UK now, they prefer to
use electrolyte balanced drinks.
Stuart
|
131.21 | I have concerns too | AKOCOA::TRIPP | | Thu Jul 23 1992 18:04 | 13 |
| My guess is that probably the medication that because Immodium stops the
bowels from moving their contents, which in a sense causes paralysis of
the bowels, probably caused paralysis of your daughter's esophogas.
Yes it is dangerous. Might even be worth calling poison control to get
their expert opinion on what to do if there were to be a next time.
Did your pedi tell you to use this on your small child? I think if he
did I'd push back a little and tell the pedi of the adverse reaction
your daughter had, she might not be the first or only child to react.
We always had good luck with Kaopectate or good ol' Pepto.
Lyn
|
131.22 | | DTIF::ROLLMAN | | Fri Jul 24 1992 10:57 | 17 |
|
We used Immodium with Elise during one illness. After 3 days of vomiting and
diarrhea, we needed to do something to stop the fluid loss, after the vomiting
stopped and she could retain liquids. The pediatrician recommended we use it,
but only for one day, and no more than 3 doses total. If it
took more than that to slow the diarrhea, we would try other things.
The side effect we observed was thirst. It made her extremely thirsty, to the
point of her asking for water every 15 minutes or so. Now, granted, we were
using it because of possible dehydration, but the effect was dramatic. Since
we couldn't let her drink all she wanted (feared the vomiting would start again),
she sipped continuously for hours.
The few times my husband has used it, he has also been very thirsty.
Pat
|
131.23 | one ounce per hour is best | AKOCOA::TRIPP | | Fri Jul 24 1992 11:44 | 20 |
| Elise, my pedi's rule of thumb to prevent dehydration while having
either vomiting or diarrhea is to drink one ounce, and only one ounce
per hour of a clear liquid, preferably apple juice, gateraid, or flat
gingerale. (one ounce is roughly one of those little plastic cups that
comes with the childrens' tylenol and other meds. 5cc's = one tsp, so
you need 15cc's) I was told that if the child can't keep even that much
down, after 5 hours of trying then a trip to the ER for replacement
fluids is likely in order.
As for the probable cause.... there have been a lot of people out this
week with a real nasty stomach bug, it seems to get into the house and
run through the whole family. It's been making people miserable for
two to three days. Might just be a bad bug, don't feel guilty over a
little tub or pool water.
By the way we have a frappe maker, like the ice cream shops use. It's
a real quick easy way to "flatten" soda in a hurry. I would imagine a
blender or even food processor might do the same thing.
Lyn
|
131.24 | | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Fri Jul 24 1992 16:34 | 10 |
| My husband has the same reaction to maraschino cherries, some mints, and
almond extract.
We watch the brand of toothpaste we buy, and he avoids gum and other
foods or medicines with these type of flavorings. I know he can't use
Pepto Bismol because of this.
Luckily, I haven't noticed it in Gina.
judy
|
131.25 | ADMINSTERING MEDICATION | EBBV03::SALLET | | Thu Aug 06 1992 17:13 | 17 |
| My husband and I are having difficulty (GREAT difficulty) administering
medication to our 13 month old. For his first two ear infections he
was on amoxicillian and he'd spit it right back. Then he went on
suprex (Suprax??) and we'd fight to get that in him. (Luckily Connor
is pretty healthy so it's not like this is a daily thing but its
trouble when it is needed). Even trying to give him Tylenol or Tempra
is a struggle. It literally takes the two of us to administer
something.
Also, like the note in 249, we also have trouble getting him use to the
toothbrush. Basically whenever he see's us approaching with the brush
or something that appears to be medicine he gets lock jaw and slaps his
little hands over our mouths as if to say.."No way".
Do any of you have any helpful hints? We've tried putting the medicine
on a teaspoon also but he just slaps it away. He's a pretty
independent little guy.
|
131.26 | | MVCAD3::DEHAHN | ninety eight don't be late | Fri Aug 07 1992 09:59 | 19 |
|
Patrick is on a maintenance dose of the pink stuff, has been for
several months. He's very good about it now, but we've had our moments
8^).
I've found the best time to give it to him has been just before
bedtime. It has become part of the routine, and I think this is what
has made it a non issue. If it becomes a routine at a certain time then
it's less of an unknown to them.
We always gave him the medicine in a teaspoon. When he would fight,
the technique I'd use is, one hand on the spoon, the other hand on his
forehead, tilting his head back a little. The object is not to put a
head lock on him 8^) but to steady his head from shaking side to side
(the 'no' shake). Once he was steady he would open his mouth and give
in.
Chris
|
131.27 | give the child a choice! | STUDIO::KUDLICH | nathan's & morgan's mom! | Mon Jan 11 1993 11:52 | 8 |
| We used logic also. After many months of liking his medicines,
Nathan all of a sudden decided he did not like any (pink was a major
food group in our house his first winter) antibiotics. We explained
that he would take his medicine, and that was that. Would he like to
take it friendly-like, and maybe get a treat and definitely loves, or
would he be forced to take it, with angry parents and unhappy tears.
Once given the choice, he knew what he wanted; this phase lasted bery
little time!
|
131.28 | Help to get kids to swallow pills | STAR::HORN | | Wed Mar 10 1993 14:32 | 33 |
| My soon to be 4 year old (BOD 3-17-98) suddenly needs to take iron pills twice
a day. Unfortunately iron does not come in a chewable form. It comes as pills
(like adults take), liquid or capsules.
How do you get a 4 yr old to swallow a pill?
The capsules would be great because I could cut them open and sprinkle them in
just about anything, but they are expensive (CVS had 60 caps for $13.00).
That's a one month supply.
Liquid iron cannot be mixed with milk and Kyle is not much of a juice drinker.
It's milk or water, and I'm sure water won't camouflage the taste. Plus my doctor
said I'd need to buy tons if I choose liquid form, and liquid is more expensive
capsules.
So I bought 100 pills for $4. They are the same exact ones I have taken in the past.
They don't taste bad, they are just chalky inside and make you gag (I chewed one
to see what Kyle would be getting, normally I swallow mine whole).
Forget trying to put it in a spoonful of ice cream, pudding, applesauce,
or yogurt. This is a 4 yr old we are talking about. He swallows the food,
then pulls out the pill and hands it back to me.
So my solution is to give him 1 life saver (candy) and 1 iron pill and have him
chew them simultaneouly. Then he quickly gulps down some milk when it's over.
But candy at 7:30AM is not my ideal for starting the day, even if it is only 1
piece. Then we do this routine again after dinner.
Does anyone else have a healthy method of getting actual pills into kids?
PS: Iron is absorbed much faster when taken with vitamin C so Kyle eats a
kiwi or an orange after his iron pill. Kiwi has twice as much iron as
an orange!
|
131.29 | What's a little life saver among friends... | NASZKO::DISMUKE | WANTED: New Personal Name | Wed Mar 10 1993 14:51 | 6 |
| Personally, if it means getting the pill down, I'd go with the candy at
7:30 in the morning. The other option is to have him practice swallowing
whole using M&M's (at a time when "candy" is allowed 8^) ).
-sandy
|
131.30 | ex | GOLF::BREAULT | | Wed Mar 10 1993 14:52 | 18 |
|
My son Michael, 14 months, has been on Synthroid since he was 10 days
old. Synthroid only comes in pill form so we had to figure out how
to give this baby a pill! In the very beginning we crushed it into
powder and gave it to him on the end of our finger. He has no problem
taking the pill. What we do now is break it into 4 pieces and put it
in applesauce. So, my suggestion is try breaking it up into smaller
pieces and put it in something. Sometimes, Michael finds it in the
applesauce and chews it with his front teeth. Maybe the whole pill
is the problem.
I'm interested to see how you make out because I'm not sure what the
future will bring for us in taking his pill. He will have to take
it everyday for the rest of his life.
Good luck!
Kelly
|
131.31 | | RICKS::PATTON | | Wed Mar 10 1993 15:16 | 7 |
| I've had good luck in the past asking the pharmacist for
suggestions about giving medication to kids. This is the
way I learned the trick about dripping eye drops into my
son's eye as he lies on his side. Maybe your druggist has
some ideas on this one, in addition to the noters'.
Lucy
|
131.32 | | SPEZKO::KILLORAN | | Wed Mar 10 1993 16:14 | 15 |
|
I had to take iron pills when I was a kid too. The
way that my Mom got me to take them was to take a
piece of cake or donut and chew it up, just when
I was about to swallow the food I popped the pill
in my mouth and swallowed it down with the food.
It worked for me.
Good luck,
Jeanne
|
131.33 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | c'mon springtime | Tue Mar 16 1993 11:38 | 2 |
|
How about powder form in chocolate milk?
|
131.34 | | ICS::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Thu Mar 18 1993 14:42 | 3 |
| Is there anyway he can take a multivitamin with extra iron, 2x a day?
At least those are flavored like candy.
|
131.35 | Try a straw | ROSMRY::MATTIA | | Fri Mar 19 1993 15:52 | 8 |
| My son had a reaction to the pennicillin in the liquid form. (Dye made
him hyper) so we switched to pills. Jason was 4 1/2 at the time. What
worked for us was for Jason to put the pill as far back into his mouth
without gagging, then I gave him a cup of water or juice and a straw.
When he sucked in the liquid, the force of it pushed the pill down his
throat. This worked on the first try 99.9% of the time.
Donna
|
131.36 | some ideas, a little late... | SALES::LTRIPP | | Wed May 26 1993 12:51 | 31 |
| I realize this is late, but I've been quite behind in notes...
I wondered if Orange Juice or even grapefruit juice might help disguise
the taste. I know they use this method for people who have to take
other disgusting things, including mineral oil.
I also have seen a "pill cup" in the CVS, Brooks and other types of
drug stores. It's a plastic cup, with a kind of pocket built into the
top of it, you put the pill in the pocket, fill the cup with (whatever)
kind of liquid, and just take a drink. Supposidly the pill and the
drink hit your mouth at the same time, and you swallow them both
together.
I also wonder if, since you are having him chew the pill, did you
consider the new life savers "gummies". It's life saver candy in a
"gummy bear" type of consistency. I personally think they're horrible,
but kids seem to think differently. For that matter how about fruit
dinasauers instead of the gummies, or wrapping the pill in a piece of
"fruit by the foot" which all the kids seem to love. There's something
about citrus flavors that do a good job of masking bad flavors. Lime
Sherbet might be a solution too.
If it's iron he needs, I seem to remember the pharmacist carries,
behind the counter but NOT prescription, Ferris-Sulphate tablets.
These are a generic version of iron, quite inexpensive, and I remember
the tablets being fairly small, say about the size of a seudofed
tablet.
Can you tell I've been packing too many school lunches lately?
Lyn
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