China Daily

Children at risk from parental prescripti­ons

The lack of ‘ child- specific’ medication has led many parents to give their children reduced doses of drugs intended for adults. While the practice often works, medical experts are concerned that imprecise doses and inappropri­ate treatments could endange

- WANG ZHUANGFEI / CHINA DAILY

Many parents don’t understand the risks of unsafe medication. They usually treat their children by cutting the volume of drugs in each dose by a half or a quarter. This habit is still prevalent in many families.”

Yang Wanli

Yan Mei is the mother of a 16- year- old boy and a 9- year- old girl. Her children have visited the hospital less than eight times in their lives — not because they have been in excellent health, but because Yan has been acting as the “family doctor” herself.

However, the 42- year- old from Sichuan province is not a pediatrici­an. In fact, she has no medical training at all, but she has often decided to “selftreat” her children’s minor ailments, such as colds, slight fevers and gastrointe­stinal discomfort.

When her son was age 4, he developed a bad cold and a persistent cough. “I crushed an antibiotic pill intended for adults and gave him half. The next day, his condition had improved greatly,” Yan said, adding that her mother treated her the same way during her own childhood, and she has often used the method to treat her children.

She complained that the local children’s hospital is always full, so she rarely visits it. “Maybe we will end up with the same prescripti­on after waiting for a whole day. A cough is not a big deal and my treatment works well,” she said.

If the children have diarrhea, she treats them with berberine, a type of ammonium salt that is often used in China as a broad- spectrum anti- microbial medicine.

Yan has been lucky — the treatments she has given her children have never caused them discomfort, but the same cannot be said for many other parents, who may wish they had not given their children medicine without seeking guidance from pediatrici­ans.

In 2014, there were 20,000 deaths resulting from the improper use of medicines, and one in every three who died was younger than 18, according to statistics from the National Health and Family Planning Commission.

Last year, the Capital Institute of Pediatrics in Beijing, one of China’s most renowned children’s hospitals, treated more than 2 million children, with more than 6,000 requiring treatment in the emergency room. About 150 cases were the result of unsafe “self- medication” in the family home.

On Jan 1, China relaxed the national family planning policy that restricted most couples to one child. While that should result in a baby boom in the years to come, medical experts have expressed concerns that the administra­tion of untested, potentiall­y unsafe, medication at home could pose a health risk to children.

According to a report released last year by Familydoct­or, a popular medical- informatio­n website, 45 percent of Chinese parents admitted giving their children a “reduced dose” of adult drugs without consulting a pediatrici­an.

In 2013, the Guangdong province branch of the China Food and Drug Administra­tion conducted a survey of 2,000 parents across China. The results indicated that between 12 and 32 percent of children — depending on region and city — had been given adult medicines by their parents.

The treatments were administer­ed in a number of ways: some parents admitted giving their children small doses of drugs intended for adults, but without researchin­g the correct dose, while others said they simply increased or reduced the number of pills they gave their children based on how they responded, but again failed to consult medical profession­als.

“Unsafe medication can be life- threatenin­g in some cases,” said Wang Fei, deputy director of the Intensive Care Unit at the Capital Institute of Pediatrics. Chang Yanqun, a pediatrici­an in Guangzhou, Guangdong province

Wang said that about 20 to 30 percent of parents improperly used antibiotic­s to treat their children’s seasonal flu.

In lower- level hospitals, the number of cases related to antibiotic abuse is likely to be far higher, she said, adding that about 90 percent of upper respirator­y tract infections are caused by viruses, and antibiotic­s are not an appropriat­e treatment.

Moreover, if children are given antibiotic­s by their parents before arriving at the hospital, it will affect the results of blood tests, and “will also trigger an imbalance in the bacteria groups within the body. Moreover, the body builds up a tolerance if antibiotic­s are abused,” she said.

The improper use of medication­s also imposes a huge burden on children’s metabolism­s because their livers and kidneys are not fully developed. Even worse, sometimes children are poisoned as a result of the use, or excessive use, of inappropri­ate drugs, she said.

According to Chang Yanqun, a pediatrici­an at the Guangdong Maternal and Child Health Hospital in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province, the rate of adverse reactions among children is generally double that of adults, because children are more sensitive to the effects of medicinal drugs.

For example, even low doses of antihistam­ines and alcohol — common ingredient­s in cold medication­s — can adversely affect younger patients, caus- ing excitabili­ty or, conversely, excessive drowsiness.

Chang said a combinatio­n of low incomes and a decadeslon­g shortage of pediatrici­ans has resulted in a growing number of parents prepared to administer drugs to their children.

“Many parents don’t understand the risks of unsafe medication. They usually treat their children by cutting the volume of drugs in each dose by a half or a quarter. This habit is still prevalent in many families,” he said.

However, even with the right ingredient­s, the correct doses for adults and children differ widely. The instructio­ns in most packs explain the appropriat­e doses, but some parents don’t bother to read them.

“Some parents just split the capsule open and divide the ingredient­s into two or three portions, or they crush a pill into powder and give the child a small amount,” said Su Ming, from the China office of Pfizer, the United States’ pharmaceut­ical giant.

Su said “designed doses” help the body absorb the ingredient­s. They also allow the active ingredient­s to be delivered to the intended spot with lower levels of wastage and little harm to internal organs. For example, capsules dissolve slowly to delay the release of their ingredient­s, and many pills are covered by a thin coating that has the same result.

“If these designed drugs are damaged, the drugs will be released in the wrong place — for example, in the stomach rather than the intestines.

( left), deputy director of the Intensive Care Unit at the Capital Institute of Pediatrics, shows a mother how to administer medicine to her child. Some ingredient­s may damage the stomach, and others will be less effective than intended,” he said.

Supply shortfall

In China, the number of drugs specifical­ly designed to treat children is limited. According to the website of the China Food and Drug Administra­tion, more than 170,000 drugs have been registered so far, but only about 3,000 are intended for children.

Zhang Yiran, marketing manager at Pfizer’s China office, said pharmaceut­ical products intended solely for children must undergo extensive trials within the targeted age range. “However, clinical tests on children always involve perceived concerns over ethical issues and the fear of harming them, especially babies,” she said.

According to a 2010 report by the US Food and Drug Administra­tion, only 20 to 30 percent of FDA- approved drugs are considered suitable for pediatric use. That means the effects of most of the products used to treat adults have not been studied in children — even though physicians may use them to treat children.

“The biggest challenge is not related to new drugs, but the lack of instructio­ns related to safe doses for children,” Zhang said, adding that many common children’s illnesses can usually be treated with drugs marketed for adults, but the lack of dosage informatio­n limits the choice of appropriat­e medication.

As an example, Zhang described one of Pfizer’s children’s drugs that is widely used to treat respirator­y infections. The treatment contains the same active ingredient­s as the medication for adults, but the adult treatment comes in the form of a pill, while the children’s version is a powder, which is easy to measure and can be mixed with food and drinks.

“The ingredient­s are made into thousands of tiny balls, each coated for slow release. More important, it tastes sweet,” Zhang said. “If more informatio­n about appropriat­e doses for children were made available, I think fewer parents would treat child illnesses with drugs intended for adults.”

Lack of interest

Although demand for children’s drugs is high, many pharmaceut­ical companies are unwilling to provide them. “Apart from the high level of investment required, concerns over ethical issues and the time- consuming research process, children’s medicines usually contain a lower concentrat­ion of active ingredient­s than those intended for adults, which means lower profits,” said Wang from the Capital Institute of Pediatrics, which runs its own drugs company.

Wang suggested the National Health and Family Planning Commission should draft preferenti­al policies, such as providing financial support or reducing taxes, to encourage companies to develop drugs for children, or manufactur­e children’s versions of adult medication­s.

She also urged the accelerati­on of import approval for a range of new drugs for children and treatments for rare childhood diseases that have been clinically tested and approved overseas. In some situations, especially in Intensive Care Units, some of these medication­s could be crucial to whether a child’s life can be saved, according to Wang.

“Hospitals are unable to purchase drugs that have been used in Western countries for years but are still waiting import approval,” she said. “Parents have often obtained the drugs from overseas via agencies, but the number of agencies is falling because the owners are anxious to avoid possible medical disputes.

“It’s also hard for doctors to decide whether to recommend unapproved drugs to parents. Everyone will be satisfied if the patient is cured, but if a dispute happens, the recommenda­tion ( even if it is proved to correct) will be a problem,” she said. Contact the writer at yangwanli@ chinadaily. com. cn

 ?? CHEN WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A man buys medicine for his sick child at a drugstore in Yuncheng, Shanxi province. Many parents treat their children’s minor ailments themselves.
CHEN WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY A man buys medicine for his sick child at a drugstore in Yuncheng, Shanxi province. Many parents treat their children’s minor ailments themselves.
 ??  ?? Wang Fei
Wang Fei

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