NO! Never give your child your medication - it is too strong for them and might even kill them.
You CAN'T!!!!Tylenol & Codeine are not meant for children!!!!
27.5 mL every 4-6 hours
With a controlled drug like codeine, the best thing to do is call the doctor.
Codeine should not be used to help children sleep. Unless it is to suppress a cough that keeps them awake.
Only Tylenol #3 which can only be accessed through doctors permission. ---------------------------- Nope. If the Tylenol (or acetaminophen) has a number (#1, 2, 3, or 4) it has increasing doses of codeine - Tylenol #1 has 8mg (with the 325mg acetaminophen), #2 has 15mg, #3 has 30mg (the most often used), and #4 has 60mg per tab. All are Controlled Substances in the U.S., Schedule III. Permission doesn't enter into it - they all require a prescription with DEA number, or in some states a special controlled drug form. They can be prescribed by phone, unlike Schedule II (morphine, Ritalin etc.). Canada allows their #1 version to be sold over the counter. Happy pain relief. --OLD MD
i am a student and have just been assigned a 92 year old patient with an allergy to demerol and morphine. What would be safe for pain ?
No if its not harmful for 2 year-old kids then its probably not harmful for you.
get the kid childrens Tylenol. Or look up whats in child's Tylenol and do the math to adjust the adult dose to make it equal the kids dose
No, a 15 year old is not supposed to alternate Tylenol and Ibuprofen. It is important to get recommendation from a doctor before you buy any drugs.
Presumably you did not give the medication to your child, so there is no harm done. You can call the board of medicine and the board of pharmacy to report.
is not safe for 11 year old because it for 18 year old
Yes, but do not take them in excess. If you have cirrhosis or liver problems, simply take the Tylenol with Codeine 3. Tylenol and Ibuprofen have the same effects and mechanisms of action, so there is no reason, unless explicitly instructed by your physician, to take them both together.DON'T DO IT. Use of Tylenol with other pain relievers (such as aspirin, ibuprofen, naproxen sodium, ketoprofen or prescription pain relievers) is not recommended, unless directed by your doctor. Don't take Tylenol(acetaminophen) with other acetaminophen products. You can exceed the daily recommended limits and cause liver damage. Dosage is different for kids and adults. A five year old took four Tylenol and had irreparable liver damage.research it at www.Tylenol.com. Don't listen to message boards. Talk to your doctor.