It’s rare that my daughter has been ill enough that she needed to take prescription medicine. In fact, this past week was the first time she was prescribed antibiotics in her eight years. She needed to take a liquid form of that traditional pink thick syrup to get rid of an infection. The first few doses she was able to drink with only a wrinkled up nose. After two days, she had decided that the medicine wasn’t working and it made her gag, so she refused to drink it. I knew she was strong-willed (is that the nice way to say stubborn??). I was at a loss, frustrated and mad at her defiance. After I calmed down, I did some reading and found the suggestion of diluting strong medicines in our favorite self-help book, “Smart Medicine for a Healthier Child”. I confirmed the findings with the pharmacist who filled our prescription who suggested using a juice as a dilution. That trick seemed to work for two more doses, then my daughter and I were battling again. My next avenue was to call the doctor’s office and a nurse there recommended a stronger flavor like chocolate syrup. The next dose we tried that and suddenly my daughter “loved” taking her medicine. She even offered to mix the dose herself so she could squeeze extra chocolate into it! I always supervised and set a limit to her chocolate intake! Luckily, the medicine bottle was finished within a few more days and her infection has cleared. I’m always amazed at the things you have to learn the hard way in this parenting adventure! What tricks have you tried with your kids who need to take medications?
Medicine Tricks: a Spoonful of ?? Makes the Medicine Go Down
July 9, 2009 by Dawn
My sister had a pill form of some prescription she had to take at a very early age, probably around age 4. She was not able to swallow the pill so my grandmother, who took care of us during the day, would smoosh it up and mix in jelly. Katie LOVED eating the jelly all by itself! I, on the other hand, learned to swallow a pill pretty fast, as I could NEVER stand the taste of any of the medicine the doctors gave me. And that “pink stuff” that all my friends raved about, because it “tasted like bubble gum” I despised!
Luckily, Lilah loves the taste of all of the kids’ medicine (even the bitter ones) and I was the same. I had to have my stomach pumped as a kid because my grandma left the bottle of baby aspirin next to the bed when I had a fever. When she returned to the room, to her horror, I had eaten the entire bottle. I think this was before safety caps. It tasted like candy.
This weekend I learned something about how to take baking soda (for heartburn or gas cramps). Instead of trying to mix it with water and torture yourself by drinking it, just put the amount you want to take on a spoon with enough water to stop it from sticking to the spoon. Then have a glass of water nearby. Put the spoonful in your mouth, swallow, then chase it with the water. It was so much easier.
TC- Still sounds bitter and disgusting, but I guess if you have gas…. LOL!!!!!
LOL!!! The thing is … you really don’t taste it as long as you put the spoon on the roof of your mouth and tip the medicine back down your throat. I’m assuming that would probably work with most medicines.
In that case, I will have to try it! hahahahah!!!!