Thanks to Linda Anderman who tweeted this to me: 

Parents aren’t doing a great job measuring out medications for their
little ones — and the problem may be that we’re still using the
so-called English system rather than switching to the metric system, a new
study shows.

Busy multitasking parents make all kinds of medication errors, such as
reading tablespoons for teaspoons, which results in three times the dose,
or substituting a kitchen spoon for an actual teaspoon. That may at least
partially explain the more than 10,000 annual calls to poison centers,
researchers suggested in the study published Monday in Pediatrics.

The researchers found that when parents were given a prescription in
teaspoons or tablespoons nearly 40 percent measured wrong, while more than
40 percent read the dosage off the prescription wrong. When prescriptions
were written in metric units parents were half as likely to make mistakes.
The findings suggest that medicines should switch to a milliliter-only
standard, the researchers say.

http://www.nbcnews.com/health/kids-health/accidental-overdose-parents-are-terrible-measuring-kids-meds-n153926
David Pearl www.MetricPioneer.com 503-428-4917

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