To Curb Medicine Mistakes, J&J Introduces ‘Dose-Limiting’ Cap

Following a tide of recalls, Johnson & Johnson is rolling out a new container design intended to prevent accidental overdoses of children’s over-the-counter remedies, reports The Wall Street Journal.

The innovation is a dose-limiting cap that helps parents draw, with a syringe, the right amount of medicine. The new containers will be introduced at the end of this year, a safety move apparently intended to inspire confidence among parents who have been disturbed by Johnson & Johnson’s raft of product recalls.

More than 40 of Johnson & Johnson’s children’s medicines have been pulled off pharmacy shelves since last May over quality problems. Among the recalled products was grape-flavored Tylenol, which was reintroduced in October.

Medicine dose mistakes, often because of unclear instructions on package labels, are a widespread problem. The U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention, a nonprofit standards-setting organization, this year called for improvements in prescription container labeling, citing research showing that 46 percent of patients once or more have misunderstood dosage instructions.

Another Journal story notes that, according to the National Community Pharmacists Assn., as many as three out of four Americans do not take medication as directed. It also reported that such mistakes have led to rising numbers of incidents that have brought patients to hospital emergency rooms.

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