Results tagged “cough and cold” from Child Safety Blog
Cold and flu season is upon us. When we're unlucky
enough to come down with something, it's almost second nature to reach a
multi-symptom cold medicine. New findings show that, when it comes to
children, parents should think twice before giving such medications to their
children.
Last year, the Center for Disease
Control (CDC) announced
that eading manufacturers of pediatric cough and cold medicines are adding a
warning to their products' labels, "Don't use over-the-counter pediatric
cough and cold medicines in children younger than 4." FDA's Center
for Drug Evaluation and Research Janet Woodcock, MD, says FDA supports the
label "change" and drug manufacturers are doing this voluntarily.
The New York
Times
recently reported results of a new Centers for Disease Control (CDC) study
on unintentional medication overdoses in children which "indicates 8
percent of emergency room visits and 14 percent of hospitalizations were caused
by parents accidentally overdosing their children."
The
study, which looks at causes for emergency room visits, estimates that 70,000
children under 18 years of age visit emergency rooms annually suffering from
unintentional medication overdoses causing adverse drug events. More
importantly, 75 percent of the overdoses occurred in children under age 5.
CDC's
web page on child medication safety further indicates that the number
one cause of emergency room visits due to adverse drug events in young
children under the age of 5 is the unsupervised consumption of medicines.
CDC also notes, according to WebMD, that 7,000 children under 11 go to
emergency rooms each year after taking cough and cold medicines. Roughly
two-thirds of those adverse drug events occurred after children consumed
medication while unsupervised.
