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Definition
- Your child refuses to take a medicine
- Techniques for giving liquid medicines, pills and capsules are also included
Wrong Technique For Giving Medicine Can Cause Vomiting - Forcing a struggling child to take any medicine can lead to vomiting or choking.
- Using a better technique can sometimes eliminate the child's resistance.
- Your child's doctor can sometimes replace a bad-tasting antibiotic with a better-tasting one or an injectable antibiotic.
- Most non-prescription medicines are not essential and can be discontinued.
Good Technique for Giving Liquid Medicine - Equipment: Plastic medication syringe or dropper (not a spoon)
- Child’s position: Sitting up (Never lying down)
- Place the syringe beyond the teeth or gumline. Some young children become cooperative if you let them hold the syringe and place it in the mouth. Then all you have to do is push the plunger.
- Goal: Slowly drip or pour the medicine onto the back of the tongue or into the pouch inside the cheek.
- Avoid squirting medicine into back of throat (Reason: can enter windpipe and cause choking)
Uncooperative Child: Additional Techniques For Giving Liquid Medicine - Caution: Never use this technique if the medicine is not essential.
- If your child is uncooperative, usually you will need 2 adults to give a medicine.
- One adult will hold the child sitting on their lap, using their hands to restrain the child’s hands and head from moving.
- The other adult will give the medicine using the following technique:
- You must have a medication syringe (available at all pharmacies without a prescription).
- Use one hand to hold the syringe and the other to open your child’s mouth.
- Open your child’s mouth by pushing down the chin or running your finger inside the cheek and pushing down on the lower jaw.
- Insert the syringe between the teeth and drip the medicine onto the back of the tongue.
- Keep the mouth closed until your child swallows. Gravity can help if you have your child in an upright position (Caution: swallowing cannot occur if the head is bent backward)
- Afterward, say: "I’m sorry we had to hold you. If you help next time, we won’t have to."
- Give your child a hug and other positive reinforcement (treat, special show, etc).
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