Apr
12
Posted on 12-04-2008
Filed Under (Medicine) by chintan on 12-04-2008

Often, an come across with a child’s doctor results in orders to give the child some medication. Patients often leave the offices of doctors and pharmacists with confusion and many unrequited questions. One study of patients leaving their doctors’ offices exposed that over fifty percent made at least one error when telling what their doctors predictable. Which is a natural reaction bearing in mind, the recording of the medical visits exposed that the doctors did not even talk about twenty percent of the medicine they agreed. For thirty percent of this drug the doctors gave no information about the first name or purpose of the drug. Of all the patients in this study, ninety percent were not told by their doctors how long to take the medicines, and less than five percent of the direction bottles contained this information. This perceptibly shows present requirements to be a clearer procession of message sandwiched between patients and doctors. There also needs to be more in sequence to make young patients and their parents better knowledgeable.

 

There are a number of factors to keep in mind whenever you give your child medicine. Before send-off the doctor’s office make sure you understand the instructions. If the instructions on the medication bottle differ from what the doctor of pharmacist said, call your doctor immediately. If you are perplexed, call the doctor or the pharmacist. Be sure of the power of the medication. Some common medications come into view in much dissimilar special treatment, and the wrong strength may be hazardous. Be sure your child is not allergic to the medication. Even the most careful doctor occasionally forgets that a child may be allergic to penicillin and may set down it. Do not give your child anything that you know he or she is allergic to. Be as precise as possible in your measurements. Teaspoons differ very a great deal in length. When most doctors prescribe a teaspoon, they mean to prescribe five cubic centimeters of medication. Kitchen measuring spoons are more precise. Many pharmacies sell small plastic measuring devices or give them absent at what time a proposal is filled. Never give your child medicine prospect for another person or medicine that the end dates has approved.

 

Some of your most interesting moments with your children will be spent trying to give them medications. Getting medication into your children will be a great test of your cleverness. But remember you are an adult, which makes you older, wiser, cleverer and in the end bigger. There are a few ways that make it easier to give children medication. First, never tell a child medication is candy. As soon as your back is turned, children will from time to time try to get as lots of of these candies into their mouths as possible. Do not tell a child that medicine taste good, when it does not. This will help you get the first dose into the child, but you will have a awful time the second time around. For younger infant, you can mix some medications in with applesauce or ice cream. Medicines usually do not give a good excellence savor toward milk and it is not optional to add medicine to milk. Most children know the taste of milk plus will back away from funny tasting milk. Most toddlers do well by profits of medicine; they can be ground into frost ointment which toddlers like. pink juice be one additional good put to hide medications. For infants younger than six months, a syringe or standardize eyedropper does well.

 

Ultimately, every parent will participate in a knock down, drag out fight with a toddler or pre-school aged youngster over taking medicine. The child in this situation, with his or her ability to spit, vomit, plus clench teeth, will win in a showdown every time. In fact the more the struggle the more the child likes the fight. In this situation, it pays to back away for a small number of minutes. Let the struggle die down and then try again. This may offer the toddler with enough sense of control that he or she will give in to taking the medicine the next time around.

 

Older children should be required to take medication as heading for. They should not need to be in danger or bribed any more than they require being backhander or threatened when it is their bedtime. Brood over the age of three can begin to be treated as adults when it comes to taking medications. Development of proper admiration for medication is important on this age. At this age, parents should start talking to them about the importance of medicine to help them through their illness, do not talk about medicine as either magic or plunder.

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Nov
02
Posted on 02-11-2007
Filed Under (Medicine) by hitesh on 02-11-2007

 

Information

As a general rule, medical or surgical procedures in Ireland may not be carried out without the informed consent of the patient.

The law is not clear on what should happen in cases where the patient is unable to give consent because, for example, of a mental disorder or because he/she is comatose. Similarly, the question of what consent is required in the case of children is not totally clear.

There are detailed rules about the conduct of clinical trials and the information that must be given to participants in these trials.

Rules

What is consent

In general, valid consent must be informed consent. The law is not clear on exactly how much information a doctor must give a patient. Consent is now legally defined for the purposes of psychiatric treatment but not for other treatment.

If there is no consent

If a person carries out medical or surgical procedures without consent, he/she could be charged with the crime of assault - the decision on charges is made by the Director of Public Prosecutions.

He/she could also be sued for the tort (civil wrong) of trespass to the person and possibly for breach of constitutional rights. If the person involved is a medical professional, he/she could also be sued for negligence. The patient may take these actions.

Competence to give consent

If you are a mentally competent adult, there is no doubt about the need for consent but what exactly constitutes informed consent is not totally clear.

You may give a general consent - for example, you may tell your doctor to do what he/she considers best. You may give implied consent by not specifically ruling out certain procedures.

Your implied consent may arise out of necessity - for example, if unexpected complications arise during an operation.

If you are seriously ill and not in a position to give or withhold consent, the doctor may carry out what would be considered usual procedures arising from necessity.

Sometimes doctors may consult with your family or nearest relatives but they really have no legal right to give or withhold consent.

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