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The Great "Medicine Pourer" Technique !
My 7 year-old son has recently been prescribed Concerta, which must be swallowed whole, cannot be crushed and cannot be opened and sprinkled onto/into food.... it can only be swallowed whole !
I have tried every possible thing that I could think of and that I have read on this forum and other forums including all of the following...
• Putting his pill in applesauce
• Putting his pill in pudding
• Putting his pill in Jello
• Putting his pill in cereal
• Putting his pill in a straw and blowing it into his throat (like a blow gun)
• Throwing it into the back of his throat
• Mixing it in his mouth with whipped cream
• Freezing it inside an ice cube (He likes to eat ice)
• Putting the pill in his mouth and washing it down with a drink
• Putting the pill in his mouth and then swallowing a drink
• Put the pill under the tongue and then swallow water
• Have him chew up food and just before it is swallowed add the pill
• Practice with mini M&Ms and Tic-Tacs
We have had limited success with some of the options above but only by accident after gagging the pill down.
Then I thought of a new method which I have not read about anywhere. I went to my nearest Wal-Mart pharmacy and asked the pharmacist for a "medicine pourer" (I'm not sure what is officially called). It looks kind of like a spoon but has a reservoir which typically holds medicine. Well, what I did was fill the reservoir up about 1/4 of the way with water and then placed the pill onto the spoon part of the pourer. I then had my son tilt his head back and stick out his tongue REAL far (I tell him to try to touch his chest with his tongue) then I put the pourer into his mouth and dump the pill into the back of his throat. Immediately after the pill goes in the water from the reservoir pushes the pill down his throat and washes it down.
I have had tremendous success with this "pourer" and would recommend it to anyone whose child is having difficulty swallowing pills.
Another thing that helped emotionally (that I learned the hard way) was to set a limit on how many times a day you would attempt to take the pill. At first I was gung-ho about "we'll keep going until you swallow it", but for my son it just kept reinforcing that he couldn't do it and was not good for him emotionally. I now limit it to four tries, if he can't get his pill down after four tries then we stop and we try again tomorrow. I've also now given him the extra incentive that if he can take his pill Monday thru Friday then he can have the weekends off, this has also been a great motivator to try and get his pill down all week.
The whole process was extremely frustrating for both myself and my son, so hopefully this information will prove to be helpful for someone just starting this process and eliminate some of the frustration for you.
Take it day-by-day, be patient (it's not always easy) and good luck !
-Dave
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Last edited by davegod : 22 Nov 2008 @ 10:52 AM.
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