Infant Cold Medicines Recalled
Drug Makers Voluntarily Withdraw Some Products For Kids Under 2 Amid Health Concerns
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Play CBS Video Video Children's Cold Meds Withdrawn Companies that make multi-symptom cold medicines for small children and infants have voluntarily withdrawn them from the market after an FDA report called them ineffective. Wyatt Andrews reports.
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Among the products being withdrawn: Tylenol Concentrated Infants Drops, Dimetapp Decongestant Infant Drops, Triaminic Infant & Toddler Thin Strips and Little Colds Decongestant Plus Cough. (Consumer Healthcare Products)
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Lark Hackney of Anchorage, Alaska, said her two grandchildren, 1-year-old Taylor and 2-year-old Julius have had many colds.
“We go to the doctor if it's gucky and it lasts very long, but a lot of times we just treat it with, you know, treat the symptoms” like fever or cough with children's medicine over the counter, said Hackney, who was at the National Zoo in Washington with her grandchildren.
She said they have used children's cold medicines and neither child has had a bad reaction.
The FDA is bringing its scientific advisers together Oct. 18-19 to debate the issues, but its own preliminary review concluded that very young children shouldn't take some of these commonly used medicines. And while the FDA's main focus is on children under 6, it also will ask if there's evidence that these drugs work in children up to age 12.
FDA praised the drugmakers' withdrawals Thursday as important for protecting babies.
For other youngsters, parents should understand that cold remedies treat only symptoms, they don't make viruses go away any faster, stressed FDA pediatrician Dr. Dianne Murphy, who urged parents to consult their pediatricians.
“What's the risk? That's what this whole meeting is about,” she said. “You need to weigh 'Is that symptom that important to treat?'"
Most coughs shouldn't be suppressed - that's how the body clears the lungs, she added. Low-grade fevers are how the body fights infection.
Maureen Javers of Silver Spring, Md., likes to let colds play out unless a doctor says her children, 3-year-old Declan and 1-year-old Evelyn have an infection.
“I don't really like to medicate them if they don't need to have the medicine,” she said.
Health groups say that while low doses of cold medicine don't usually endanger an individual child, the bigger risk is unintentional overdose. For example, the same decongestants, cough suppressants and antihistamines are in multiple products, so using more than one to address different symptoms - or having multiple caregivers administer doses - can quickly add up. Also, children's medicines are supposed to be measured with the dropper or measuring cap that comes with each product, not an inaccurate kitchen teaspoon.
And, since “the medicine isn't doing what the family wants, instead of giving as directed every six hours they give every four hours or every two hours,” says Dr. Basil Zitelli of the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, who sees such children in the emergency room. “What they in effect are doing is poisoning their child.”
What to try instead? Pediatric and public health groups recommend:
Plenty of fluids and rest.
Suction bulbs to gently clear infants' clogged noses. Saline nose drops loosen thick secretions so noses drain more easily.
A cool-mist humidifier in the child's bedroom.
Acetaminophen or ibuprofen, as recommended by your doctor, to alleviate pain or discomfort - but check that they don't contain extra ingredients.
Some chest creams can ease stuffiness with menthol or other fragrances, but check labels for age restrictions.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





'' ... little naked girls know well, if one puts a naked girl on a news desk dancing get well feed world songs rallied around the sick beds, then the world will fill with naked girls on news desks everywhere, which is why little naked girls don''t get on news desks, to give little dressed armed boys a chance ... ''
'' ... the coach entered the locker room screaming and hollering about the *** he caught on his team, and the girls all laughed ''coach coach coach, where have you been'', and a little naked boy walked in and said, ''let''s play ball y''all ... ''
'' ... the silly parrot tripped me, somebody get it ... ''
'' ... 36 sick beds each day, 7 days a week, for 36 dollars a day ... ''
Right on alishia I''m totally with you...I have 3...and I totally agree.
Also...the CHILDRENS brands are still out there. It''s only the INFANTS that they have recalled. What''s funny, is they have the same dosing ages on them. That always cracked me. I stopped using the infants after my first...becaues the children''s is cheaper, and it has the EXACT SAME ages and weights on it that are on the INFANTS. It is less concentrated, so it''s harder to give a sick baby who doesn''t want to swallow anything. But, you can use the CHILDRENS brand for infants...just do it by weight. My doctors always encouraged me to only use saline, until they finally realized JUST how bad my sons sinuses are. I swear they just write up an antibiotic prescription when they see me coming now, becaues they know I''ve done EVERYTHING possible to stay out of the office.
Every baby is different and has different needs...some need decongestants.
Grrrrrr. Stupid FDA.
And now... it is obvious that some folks will go ahead and dose their child - children - with cold meds meant for adults. *shakes head again... and wonders about the ''powers that be'' who make up the rules as we all go along.
concerning the infant medicine recall - has there been an investigation on the droppers? My grandson is 20 months old and I have noticed a difference in the sizes of the droppers given by pharamacies and over the counter meds. The milliliters on one dropper is not the same quantity as on other droppers.
dawn gray
Big Pharma spent 8 billion dollars lobbying Washington this last year, they do what they want to do and not what is good for public health. Such a vast amount of money renders the FDA useless and it is a poor excuse to state that parents are using these medicines to excess. Most of this junk is Snake Oil which the FDA should have pulled years ago, however in their incestuous relationship with Big Pharma the question was never going to arise.
If your comment was aimed at me...you misunderstood what I meant, so let me clarify please. I am for leaving the pediatric drugs available to parents...they should not be removed just because some parents overdosed their children. My fear is now that the children''s medication is no longer available...some "stupid" parents might try to give their children medication made for adults to relieve the child''s symptoms.
however, you have to counter that with the enourmous amount of pressure that the drug companies place on them to get ''any drug'', including the off label use of many drugs to market.
personally, i would like to see the FDA''s staff increased. in some cases it would be great to get a cancer drug to market quicker, and in others the drug probably should never get to market.
you need an honest broker to make that call. and the FDA is the closest we have to one. Overall i think that their role has been a positive one.
the good news, in the next 10-30 years, the breakthroughs that have been made in science, breakthroughs like mapping of the human genome, tools that allow us to observe the affect of medications like the functional MRI, are leading to a much better understanding of how diseases work. we are, for the first time in history, creating drugs that SHOULD WORK, as appossed to accidently finding ones that do. Pencillin and many other drugs have simply been found by accident.
The result i beleive is that we are going to create 5 to 10 times the medications that are currently available to cure human disease.
That is a great problem to have.
why_not?
Good story. However one thing that you may have missed. Two weeks ago on 60 Minutes, you reported that Rebecca Riley was given one of these products, or something very much like it shortly before her death. Your two stories may be related.
BTW, in your first looks, being ''understated'', no makeup, no frills comes across as being more genuine. (just do not touch the person you are interviewing. not even a friendly jab in the shoulder. it''s just a habit. and no everyone you interview doesn''t have to repeat, it''s the CBS evening news with Katie Couric, although is was funny the first few times)
Also, your taping of ''how the news happens'' the audio, the graphis, how the stories are edited and put together is fascinating, and something you might consider for a series of real stories.
Understated can be good.
See you later.
- by missingamerica October 11, 2007 4:34 PM EDT
- Wonder if there is any link between the ever-rising diagnoses of ADHD and ADD and the number of parents over the last several decades who, consciously or not, used "the purple stuff" (and the various other colors) for a sleeping aid for their fretful child?
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