The American Academy of Pediatrics is recommending all liquid medicine for children be measured in milliliters instead of the traditional teaspoons and tablespoons.
"Metric dosing is the most precise way to dose medications and prevent overdoses," said Dr. Ian Paul, lead author of a new policy statement from the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Accidental medication overdoses send more than 70,000 children to U.S. emergency rooms each year, according to background information with the statement, which is published online March 30 in the journal Pediatrics.
Using only milliliters "eliminates at least some significant sources of dosing confusion and errors," he added.
Currently, some over-the-counter medications include metric dosing instructions along with a measuring device marked in teaspoons, the academy noted.
Previous research has found that parents who use only milliliters when giving kids medicine make fewer errors than parents who use teaspoons or tablespoons, the statement said.
NASA uses metric units, although Lockheed Martin used pound force seconds instead of newton seconds in calculations with the Mars Climate Orbiter, causing it to burn up in the Martian atmosphere.
(Score: 2, Insightful) by KiloByte on Tuesday March 31 2015, @07:37PM
The problem is, some teaspoons I have are over twice as big as small ones, same with tablespoons. Using them for measuring anything is worthless.
Ceterum censeo systemd esse delendam.