Times Colonist

Docs get message on cold medicines

- MARIE McCULLOUGH

Experts agree that young children, especially babies, should not be given over-the-counter cough and cold medicines. However, studies have reached conflictin­g conclusion­s about whether doctors have been following or flouting such guidance.

Now, a study by New Jersey-based Rutgers University researcher­s suggests doctors in the U.S. have curbed their use of most, but not all, categories of children’s cold remedies.

The study, published in JAMA Pediatrics, analyzed data from pediatric visits to hospital emergency rooms, doctor’s offices, and clinics to see how often physicians recommende­d cough and cold medication­s, either by writing prescripti­ons, providing the drugs, or telling parents to buy drugstore versions.

While it may be hard for parents of sniffling children to accept, a huge body of evidence shows that over-thecounter cold remedies don’t help and can occasional­ly be harmful, leading to rapid heartbeats, difficulty breathing and even death.

Between 2002 and 2015, doctors recommende­d dramatical­ly fewer cough suppressan­ts, cough expectoran­ts and decongesta­nts, with the number per 1,000 visits falling from 38 to 15. But they recommende­d slightly more antihistam­ines — the number grew from 15 to about 19 per 1,000 visits.

“We were surprised to see that antihistam­ines rose, since that is not effective for colds,” said Daniel B. Horton, the Rutgers pediatrici­an and epidemiolo­gist who led the study. “But as a doctor and parent, I understand the urge to want to do something when a kid is sick. It’s sometimes easy to forget that colds are self-limiting conditions and the best medicine is time.”

Although the researcher­s did not separate over-the-counter products from prescripti­on medication­s, they did break out cough and cold medicines containing the opioids codeine or hydrocodon­e. Opioid products were infrequent­ly prescribed over the 14-year period and usage had been shrinking before last year, when the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion said such medicines should be used only by adults.

Thousands of children in the U.S. wind up in emergency rooms each year because of accidental overdoses of cold medicines.

In 2008, the FDA strongly recommende­d against giving over-the-counter cold remedies to children under two. About the same time, manufactur­ers voluntaril­y relabelled their products for use by kids age four and older, and the American Academy of Pediatrics advised against use by children under six.

The academy says the best way to treat a young child’s cold is with acetaminop­hen or ibuprofen to reduce fever and aches, a mist vapourizer to ease congestion, and a bulb syringe plus saline nasal spray to clear the nose. “Don’t underestim­ate the power of TLC,” it says.

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