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MAGAZINE
CUSTOMER
SERVICE CENTER
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Poison
Treatment -- Ipecac No Longer Top Choice
Q&A on Poison Treatment Recommendations
The American
Academy of Pediatrics recommends a new poison treatment in the home.
It previously advised that parents keep a 1-ounce bottle of syrup
of ipecac in the home to induce vomiting if it was believed a child
had swallowed a poisonous substance. The AAP now recommends that
syrup of ipecac no longer be used routinely at home by parents or
caregivers.
For years, the
AAP and other groups said syrup of ipecac was an important item
in the home medicine chest. So, now why such a drastic change?
There was never
any evidence that giving syrup of ipecac to children to make them
vomit decreased death rates due to poisoning. It was a practice
based on intuition rather than science. In other words, doctors
and parents just assumed that vomiting removes poison from a child's
body. For many years, that assumption was never tested or researched.
But in the past few years, scientific tests and research have shown
vomiting will not help a child who has swallowed a poisonous substance.
Q&A
on Poison Treatment Recommendations
What
should I do if I still have syrup of ipecac in my home?
· Parents should throw out syrup of ipecac that is currently
in their home in a safe manner, such as flushing it down the toilet.
If parents
can't keep syrup of ipecac in the home, how should they protect
their children against poisoning?
· The best defense against unintentional poisoning is prevention.
Parents should keep potential poisons locked out of sight and out
of reach. Replace child-resistant caps immediately after use, keep
all products in their original containers, discard all old medications,
and refer to medicine by its correct name - don't call pills "candy".
What
should a parent do if their child swallows a potentially poisonous
substance?
· When a child swallows a potentially poisonous substance,
the advice of a well-trained, well-qualified health professional
is needed. Keep the number of the Poison Control Center posted near
the phone; the universal number in the U.S. is 1/800-222-1222. Call
9-1-1 if a child is having convulsions, stops breathing or loses
consciousness.
What
about families who live far away from hospitals? Should they keep
syrup of ipecac handy just in case?
· Parents who live in rural or remote areas should still
discard any syrup of ipecac in their homes. There is no evidence
that shows benefit for children who are treated with ipecac. That
fact does not change for those who live far from hospitals.
What
is the reason for the new recommendation?
· There are several reasons behind the new recommendation.
Most importantly, there has never been any evidence that vomiting
helps children who eat or drink something poisonous. Also, most
emergency rooms have stopped using ipecac in favor of activated
charcoal, which binds to poison in the stomach and prevents them
from entering the bloodstream. Continued vomiting caused by syrup
of ipecac may later result in the child being unable to tolerate
activated charcoal or other poison treatments.
Information
for this article provided by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
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