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🧒 PEDIATRIC DOSE CALCULATOR

Pediatric Dose Calculator

Modern mg/kg, BSA (m²) dosing + classic Young's, Clark's and Fried's rules. Evidence-based clinical practice.

Calculate Pediatric Dose
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⚠️ Always verify against BNF for Children, Harriet Lane or local guidelines before prescribing.
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Pediatric Dose Calculation: Complete Clinical Guide

Modern evidence-based methods + classic historical formulas explained for doctors, pharmacists and medical students

Why Paediatric Dosing Is Different

Children are not simply small adults. Their bodies process drugs fundamentally differently due to immature hepatic enzyme systems, higher total body water, lower plasma protein binding, and varying glomerular filtration rates. The classic phrase from paediatric pharmacology — "children are not just small adults" — reflects a genuine physiological reality that drives every dosing decision in clinical practice.

Drug absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion all change significantly from the neonatal period through to adolescence. This means no single dosing formula works perfectly across all ages and drug classes — which is why clinicians need to understand multiple methods.

Modern Clinical Methods (Current Standard of Practice)

1. Weight-Based Dosing — mg/kg (Most Widely Used)

Formula:
Dose (mg) = Prescribed dose (mg/kg) × Child's weight (kg)

Weight-based dosing is the gold standard in modern paediatric prescribing. The vast majority of drugs listed in the BNF for Children, Harriet Lane Handbook and Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics are expressed as mg/kg doses.

Key clinical points: Always check the maximum single dose ceiling — for example, Paracetamol at 15mg/kg in a 4kg neonate gives 60mg, which is appropriate, but using the same calculation in a 70kg adolescent would give 1050mg per dose without a ceiling check. Always apply the maximum dose cap.

📋 Common mg/kg Doses (BNF for Children / Harriet Lane Reference):
DrugDoseFrequencyMax Single Dose
Paracetamol10–15 mg/kgEvery 4–6h1000mg
Ibuprofen5–10 mg/kgEvery 6–8h (TDS)400mg
Amoxicillin25 mg/kg (std) / 40mg/kg (high)TDS500mg (std) / 1000mg (high)
Prednisolone1–2 mg/kgOD40mg
Salbutamol (oral)0.1–0.15 mg/kgTDS–QDS4mg
⚠️ Reference only. Always verify with current BNF for Children or local formulary.

2. Body Surface Area (BSA) Dosing — mg/m²

Mosteller Formula (BSA):
BSA (m²) = √[(Height cm × Weight kg) ÷ 3600]
Then:
Dose = Dose per m² × Child's BSA

BSA dosing is considered more physiologically accurate than mg/kg for many drugs, as metabolic rate correlates more closely with surface area than weight. The BNF and major textbooks recommend BSA dosing particularly for chemotherapy agents, immunosuppressants and certain antibiotics.

The average adult BSA is 1.73 m². After age 1, organ growth conforms more accurately to BSA than body weight, making this method particularly valuable in school-age children and adolescents.

🎯 When to Use BSA vs mg/kg:
Use mg/kg for: Most common paediatric infections, fever, pain, standard antibiotics, steroids
Use BSA for: Chemotherapy, methotrexate, certain immunosuppressants, carboplatin, some antifungals
Use both + cross-check: High-risk drugs, narrow therapeutic index medications, critically ill children

Classic Historical Formulas

Before drug-specific mg/kg data was widely available, clinicians used age and weight-based rules to estimate paediatric doses from known adult doses. While largely superseded by modern evidence-based dosing, these formulas remain important for medical students to understand, and are still used for radiopharmaceuticals and certain nuclear medicine applications.

Young's Formula (Age-based, 2–12 years)
Dose = [Age ÷ (Age + 12)] × Adult Dose
Developed by Thomas Young (1813). Suitable for children aged 2–12 years. Not for use in infants or neonates. Still used for radiopharmaceutical dosing.
Clark's Rule (Weight-based)
Dose = [Weight(kg) ÷ 70] × Adult Dose
Attributed to Professor A.J. Clark of Edinburgh. Weight in kg divided by average adult weight (70kg). More accurate than age-based rules. Still referenced in pharmacy education.
Fried's Rule (Infants <2 years)
Dose = [Age(months) ÷ 150] × Adult Dose
Specifically designed for infants up to 2 years using age in months. Less accurate than weight-based methods but useful when weight is unavailable.
Dilling's Rule (Age-based, 4–20 years)
Dose = [Age ÷ 20] × Adult Dose
Suitable for children aged 4–20 years. Simpler than Young's formula. Referenced in pharmacology textbooks but rarely used in modern clinical practice.

Paediatric Age Classifications

ClassificationAge RangeDosing Consideration
Neonate0–28 daysImmature all systems — specialist guidance always required
Infant1 month – 1 yearFried's rule; mg/kg dosing; immature hepatic metabolism
Early Childhood1–5 yearsmg/kg dosing preferred; BSA for specialist drugs
Late Childhood6–12 yearsmg/kg or BSA; Young's/Clark's rules occasionally referenced
Adolescent13–17 yearsAdult doses often applicable; check weight and maturity

Top Safety Tips for Paediatric Prescribing

✅ Always Do
  • Weigh the patient — never estimate
  • Check maximum single dose ceiling
  • Verify with BNF for Children
  • Double-check decimal points
  • Consider renal/hepatic function
❌ Never Do
  • Use adult doses for children
  • Estimate weight without weighing
  • Prescribe mg/mL instead of mg
  • Ignore age-specific contraindications
  • Rely on a single formula alone

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Reference Sources

⚠️ Medical Disclaimer: This calculator and content are for educational and documentation assistance only. All paediatric doses must be verified against current BNF for Children, Harriet Lane Handbook or local formulary by a qualified prescriber before clinical use. Never prescribe based solely on calculator output.

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