More
than 1,500 toddlers and
babies wound up in emergency
rooms over a two-year period
and three died because of
bad reactions to cold or
cough medicine, federal
health officials reported.
The
U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention warned
parents not to give common
over-the-counter cold remedies
to children under 2 years
old without consulting a
doctor.
The
deaths of three infants
6 months or younger in 2005
led to an investigation
that showed the children
all had high levels of the
nasal decongestant pseudoephedrine,
up to 14 times the amount
recommended for children
ages 2 to 12. The study
found 1,519 ER cases from
2004 and 2005 involving
young children and cold
medicine.
The
CDC said it's not known
how much cold or cough medicine
can cause illness or death
in children under 2 years
old, but there are no approved
dosing recommendations by
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
for that age group.
The
American Academy of Pediatrics
first advised parents in
1997 about the risks of
complications and overdose
potential with certain cough
suppressants. Last year
the American College of
Chest Physicians advised
doctors not to recommend
cough suppressants and over-the-counter
cough medications to young
children because of the
risks.
Dr.
Michael Shannon, chief of
emergency medicine at Children's
Hospital Boston, said it's
common, especially in the
winter, to see emergency
room cases of toddlers given
cough or cold medicine.
"Pediatricians
have for years, particularly
for the last five years,
been for the most part trying
to dissuade parents from
giving young children common
cold preparations," Shannon
said.
Dr.
Michael Marcus, director
of pediatric pulmonology,
allergy and immunology at
Maimonides Infants and Children's
Hospital in New York, said,
"The best thing (parents)
can do is support with fluids
and lots of kisses and time,
because lots of infections
are viral and will pass
in a few days. The medications
have a greater potential
for harm than the infections
you are trying to treat."