Published
I've recently gotten into the habit of giving KCl liquid by presnting it as the dose alone in the small plastic med cup and a separate glass of juice. SOme patients will pour the KCl into the juice, but many prefer to take the KCl straight with a juice chaser.
I've had at least a dozen patients say, "I like it better this way. It's just like shooting whiskey".
Either way, when presented as two separate things, they can choose what to with it.
It is bitter to prevent people from taking too large a dose. Potassium can cause lethal cardiac rhythms. As for mixing, the problem then becomes that the patient may not finish drinking and not consume the intended dose. I had to have it once. The dose is small so people can drink it quickly and be done with it.
GingerSue
1,842 Posts
from what I remember as a first year student when we were taught (after a little taste of oral liquid potassium) that potassium in this liquid form should be mixed with juice because it is bitter
why would staff administer to a patient, this ounce of potassium, undiluted?
I asked the staff who was administering if it should be mixed with juice and the staff said no, and gave it undiluted?
The patient grimaced and said that it's bitter
sources that I've read while searching for how to administer oral liquid potassium all have said to mix it with water or juice.