Literature DB >> 10385456

Infant acceptance and effectiveness of a new oral liquid medication delivery system.

D M Kraus1, L A Stohlmeyer, P R Hannon.   

Abstract

A medication acceptance scale (MAS) for pediatric oral liquids was developed and used to evaluate effectiveness and infant acceptance of a medication delivery system. The MAS incorporated five behavioral elements associated with pediatric drug administration: cry, facial expression, body movement or level of agitation, reaction to placement of medication in the mouth, and swallowing. A score of 1-10 was possible, with 10 indicating the highest level of infant acceptance. Preliminary field testing was conducted. In an open-label clinical study, a single dose of acetaminophen was administered to 20 infants with approximately one fluid ounce of infant formula or apple juice by pediatric nurses using the Rx medibottle (The Medicine Bottle Company). Past medication acceptance was rated on an infant global acceptance scale. The intended dose, the amount consumed, and the time taken to administer the dose were recorded. Infant acceptance was independently scored by a nurse and two pharmacists. A high preliminary estimate of internal consistency reliability of the MAS was found. Interrater reliability was high, with the highest correlation between the two pharmacists. Sixteen (80%) of the infants received 100% of the intended dose; it took 0.5-9 minutes to administer these doses. The median MAS score was 9 for each of the three raters. Mean MAS scores for the three raters were 7.85 and 7.45 (pharmacists) and 8.50 (nurse). There was a strong correlation between MAS scores and infant global acceptance scale scores. A pediatric oral liquid MAS that had content validity, concurrent validity, high internal consistency reliability, and high interrater reliability was developed; the Rx medibottle was an effective oral liquid medication delivery system and had a high level of infant and rater acceptance.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10385456     DOI: 10.1093/ajhp/56.11.1094

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Health Syst Pharm        ISSN: 1079-2082            Impact factor:   2.637


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