This article was also in The Washington Post yesterday.

 

My current health care providers still use colonial units. I don’t know how 
they handle this particular situation. I used to be with Kaiser Permanente (for 
35 years, through 2006) until my employer took away that option. Now that I am 
(barely) eligible for Medicare I’m going to go back to Kaiser, beginning next 
year (I’m stuck with my current provider until then). In the last couple of 
years with Kaiser I noted that the scales were all in kg and there was a 
conversion chart next to the scale. I’m assuming they still do that (Kaiser 
Mid-Atlantic, that is).

 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/spoonfuls-can-lead-to-medicine-errors-study-finds/2014/07/13/fd8ed0a4-0ac2-11e4-929c-4cd4865c3725_story.html

 

 

 

Carleton

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
[email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, July 15, 2014 11:26
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:54154] Accidental Overdose: Parents Are Terrible at Measuring 
Kids' Meds

 

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 <http://www.MetricPioneer.com>  503-428-4917

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