Read the label. Then ask the question.
The kids' aisle is the loudest place in any store. "Pediatrician recommended." "All natural." "Boosts immunity." "Gentle." Half of those words mean nothing legally. This page is the part the marketing leaves out, written for parents who have ninety seconds and a tired kid in the cart.
Our honest stance, up front
The Dose does not diagnose your child. If your kid is sick, that is the pediatrician's job, not ours. We do not run a symptom checker. We do not calculate doses for you. We do not tell you whether what they have is viral or bacterial, allergic or infectious, mild or serious. Those are clinical judgments and we are an educational publication.
What we can do is help you walk into that pediatrician conversation knowing what the words on the bottle actually mean, what kids' supplements are not regulated for, and which phone number to dial first. That is the whole page. It is education, not advice.
How to read a children's medication label, in order
Children's OTC bottles are not adult bottles with smaller numbers. They are different products with different active ingredients, different concentrations, and different age cutoffs. Read in this order. Skipping a step is how a dose ends up wrong.
A typical children's pain reliever, what to look at and why
- 1. The active ingredient (top of the Drug Facts panel)
- This is the only word that actually does anything. Acetaminophen, ibuprofen, diphenhydramine. The brand name (Tylenol, Advil, Benadryl) is the wrapper. Two different-looking bottles can carry the same active.
- 2. The concentration
- "160 mg per 5 mL" is not the same as "100 mg per 5 mL," even for the same drug. Infant drops, oral suspension, and children's chewables can all be different concentrations of the same active.
- 3. The age cutoff
- "Do not give to children under [age or weight]" is a hard line, not a suggestion. Some products are not labeled for children under 2 or under 6 because the studies have not been done, not because they are safe and the company is being cautious.
- 4. The dose-by-weight table
- Most children's medications dose by weight, not by age. If your child is at the small end for their age, the weight column matters more than the age column.
- 5. The "do not exceed in 24 hours" line
- This is the ceiling, not the target. Five doses in 24 hours is a different drug than one dose.
- 6. The other active ingredients
- "Children's Tylenol Cold" is acetaminophen plus something else. If you also give plain children's Tylenol on top, you doubled the acetaminophen without meaning to. Combination products are the most common source of accidental overdose.
The words on kids' products, what they legally mean
Some words on a children's bottle carry FDA-defined meaning. Most do not. Here are the ones parents see every day.
Who to call. Not what is wrong, who to call.
This is a phone-number decision, not a diagnosis. If you can answer the question "is this a who-to-call situation," you can usually solve the actual problem in five minutes. Below are the lanes, with the honest framing.
Trouble breathing, lips or skin turning blue, unresponsive, projectile or repeated vomiting that will not stop, a seizure, a head injury followed by confusion, a serious allergic reaction (swelling face / hives covering body / wheezing), a fever in a baby under 3 months, a suspected poisoning or overdose. These are the moments not to hesitate.
Suspected poisoning: US Poison Control is free, 24/7, and a pharmacist or toxicologist picks up. 1-800-222-1222. They will tell you whether the ER is needed and what to do in the meantime.
Anything that worries you that is not in the 911 list above. A fever that is not coming down. A cough that has lasted longer than you expected. A rash you have not seen before. A behavior change. Any persistent symptom in a child under 2. Almost every pediatric practice has a 24-hour nurse line; the after-hours nurse is paid to take exactly this kind of call. You are not bothering them.
The script that works: "I'm not sure if this is something or not. Can I tell you what I'm seeing?" Then describe what you see, not what you think it is.
Anything about a medication, a supplement, or an over-the-counter product. Dose questions ("she's 38 pounds, what do I give?"). Combination questions ("she is on amoxicillin, can I also give children's Tylenol?"). Did-she-already-take-too-much questions. The big-chain pharmacies have a licensed pharmacist on duty whenever the pharmacy is open, and the consult is free. You do not need an appointment. They are happy to spell out a dose by weight over the phone.
If it is medication math or label-reading, the pharmacist is faster than the pediatrician, and just as qualified for that specific question.
Eight things on the kids' aisle the research has a different view on
These are categories, not specific brands. We are not saying "don't buy this." We are saying "the marketing and the literature do not always agree, so know what you are looking at." Each ends in a question worth asking your pediatrician.
Melatonin gummies for kids
Pediatric melatonin sales have multiplied in the last decade and so have calls to Poison Control. Gummies are appealing because they taste like candy, which is also why kids find them when they should not. Long-term safety in children is genuinely under-studied. Ask your pediatrician about the dose, the duration, and whether the sleep issue itself needs evaluation.
"Calming" supplements for children
Valerian, passionflower, chamomile, L-theanine. Most have minimal pediatric safety data. "Natural" does not mean studied. Some carry significant interactions with prescription meds and anesthesia. Ask your pediatrician or pharmacist before combining any of these with prescribed medication, including the day of any scheduled procedure.
Children's multivitamins with iron
Iron is the leading cause of fatal pediatric poisoning from over-the-counter products. Adult iron supplements and adult multivitamins with iron are particularly dangerous. Ask your pediatrician whether your child actually needs supplemental iron before adding one; deficiency is real but routine supplementation is not.
Benzocaine teething gels
The FDA has warned against benzocaine in children under 2 because of a rare but serious blood disorder called methemoglobinemia. Some brands have reformulated; some have not. Read the active ingredient line. Ask your pediatrician about teething pain alternatives.
Honey for babies under 12 months
Hard line, no exceptions. Honey can contain Clostridium botulinum spores that infant guts cannot handle. This includes "raw honey," "manuka honey," honey-flavored teething products, and honey in baked goods. After 12 months it is fine. Before 12 months it is not.
Essential oils on babies
Peppermint, eucalyptus, camphor, and menthol can cause serious respiratory issues in infants. Tea tree and lavender have endocrine effects in studies, particularly with repeated use. Diffusers in the room are not the same exposure as application on skin. Ask your pediatrician before applying any essential oil to an infant or using one in a small enclosed space.
"Immune support" gummies and syrups
Elderberry, echinacea, vitamin C blends. Pediatric efficacy data is mixed at best. Many of these products are sweetened heavily, which matters if your child takes them daily. Ask your pediatrician about specific deficiencies before treating a child as if they are deficient.
Cough and cold combos for kids under 6
The FDA and AAP recommend against over-the-counter cough and cold medications in children under 6, and recommend caution for 6 to 12. The combined risks of multiple actives in one bottle outweigh the modest symptom benefit. Ask your pediatrician about non-medication approaches first.
Where The Dose can help, and where it cannot
These are the tools on this site that work just as well for a children's product as an adult one. We do not have a pediatric-specific evaluator (we deliberately did not build one), so use these the same way you would for yourself: as research, not as a verdict on your kid.
Product Lookup with Dr. Henry
Snap a photo of any children's medication, OTC, or supplement bottle. Henry reads the label, names the actives, and checks the claims against the literature.
Stoplight Claim Checker with Eli
Type the claim you saw, in plain English. Eli returns a green / yellow / red verdict with a primary source.
Body Map with Dr. Claire
See where the active ingredient in a product actually acts in the body. Adult-bodied; the location is the same in a child.
Talk to Margaret
If you have a "I don't even know what to ask" question, start with Margaret. She will not diagnose, but she can point you at the right reading or the right specialist.