Here is an example of where the FDA issued a recall notice because tylenol
was packed with dose cups that were marked with metric units:

[begin quote]
"Defective container; product packaged with incorrect dosing cups marked
with metric measurements rather than with U.S. standard measurements"
[end quote]
http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/enforce/2002/ENF00775.html


--
Terry Simpson
Human Factors Consultant
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.connected-systems.com
Phone: +44 7850 511794 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf
Of John Woelflein
Sent: 18 January 2003 14:30
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:24485] Re: non-metric units on medicine

I'm not sure, but I haven't seen grains for a long time (bottles of aspirin,
so many grains per tablet). Most are grams or milligrams now. Also,
millilitres seem to be making headway in the liquid medications, i.e. the
dosage says to take 5 ml instead of a teaspoon. Most medicine droppers are
marked in ml only now. 
When my daughter was in the hospital a month ago for spinal fusion surgery,
everything was metric (although they said "cc" instead of ml or cm3. Her
mass was recorded in kilograms, temperature in degrees Celsius, and so on.
(This was at Children's Hospital in Boston.) 
�Terry Simpson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
Is it true that medicines in the US can have non-metric units on them such
as 'grains'?

--
Terry Simpson
Human Factors Consultant
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.connected-systems.com
Phone: +44 7850 511794 

John


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