Are you giving medicine to your child correctly?

Medicines can help your child feel better and get well when they are sick. But, if you don’t follow the dosage and storage instructions, they can be harmful to your child’s health.

Medicines are supposed to make your child feel better when they are sick, but they can also have the opposite effect if you don’t follow the directions for usage carefully.

“Some side effects are mild like an upset stomach while others can be more serious like liver damage,” says Mogologolo Phasha, chairman of the Independent Community Pharmacy Association. “When you follow the directions on the medicine label, or from your pharmacist, you get the best results.”

Administer medicine to your child properly

  1. Follow the directions on the medicine label carefully.
  2. If you don’t understand the directions, ask your pharmacist or doctor to explain them to you.
  3. Keep a list of all the medicines, vitamins, minerals, and herbs you use. Share this information with your pharmacist and doctor.
  4. Always ensure your child completes a course of medicationIt takes a certain length of time of exposure to a specific antibiotic or antiviral drug in order to kill the bacteria or virus. If the medication is not taken for the correct length of time, some of the bacteria or viruses can survive, multiply and cause the infection to recur – meaning your child is back where they started. Inadequate treatment can also promote the development of resistance to the drug by the bacterium or virus and the antibiotic or antiviral drug may not work at all.
  5. Your child’s script is for your child alone. It seems simple enough – you’re sick, your child has some extra/leftover prescription medication that is just going to waste, so why not take it yourself? This should never be done.

Storing medicine safely

In addition to the proper use of medicine, storing it correctly – and safely – is also important.

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