Re: Diluting meds??
Sweetheart, you are making my eyes cross! When you dilute 50mg of a solute in 20ml of saline, you have 50mg/20ml. If the dose is 50mg, you give the full 20ml. For meds that are already in liquid form, and need to be diluted because they are irritating, or need to be pushed slowly, draw the correct dose of med into a syringe, then empty that syringe into a flush to dilute. If you have an order for 50mg, and the med is 50mg/ml, draw up one ml. Then empty out 1ml of saline from a sterile flush, and squirt it into a flush. LABEL the flush with the med name and dosage in MG. You would have a solution that is 50mg/10ml, or 5mg/ml IF you emptied exactly 1ml of saline. But even if you emptied 2ml by mistake, you would still have the 50mg of med in that flush to give the patient.
The formula I use is one you probably already know:
D/HxV=Q
Where D=dose ordered
H=what you have on hand in MG
V=how many ML
Q=quantity in ML to give
So if a doc orders 30mg Lasix, and you have a vial that is 60ml/2ml, you would use the following calculation:
30/60x2=1(ml to give pt)
I hope this helps and doesn't make everything more confusing.
~Mel'
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