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Welcome to Season 2 of AMC Clinical Deep Dive!
When paediatric cough interferes with sleep, honey is a powerhouse non-drug intervention backed by NHMRC Level 1 evidence. This episode explores why honey is preferred over OTC medications for children older than 12 months, as it reduces cough frequency more effectively than no treatment or placebos. Learn the exact bedtime dose (0.5β2 teaspoons) and the critical safety contraindication: never give honey to infants younger than 12 months due to the fatal risk of botulism. We cover how to counsel parents on mucus clearance and protecting dental health from prolonged use.
Keywords: #AMCClinicalExam #PaediatricURTI #HoneyforCough #OSCEManagement #IMGAustralia #BotulismPrevention #PaediatricNocturnalCough
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Pro Tip: In your OSCE, if a parent asks for a cough suppressant for a toddler, always check the child's age first. Explicitly stating that you are recommending honey because it is "less risky than OTC medications" and has "NHMRC Level 1 evidence" demonstrates the high-level safety and evidence-based knowledge examiners expect.
Also, visit the Sore Throat topic below:
S1E77 - Paediatric Fever and Sore Throat
π If this clinical topic interests you, visit the full webpage for extended notes and additional exam-oriented resources: URTI Clinical Skills Navigator
π§ Episodes in β β β β Season 1β β β β (150 clinical scenarios) have been indexed by topic, patient group, discipline, setting, and more to support targeted learning. Use the filters to locate discussions relevant to your study or clinical training.
By MedistandingWelcome to Season 2 of AMC Clinical Deep Dive!
When paediatric cough interferes with sleep, honey is a powerhouse non-drug intervention backed by NHMRC Level 1 evidence. This episode explores why honey is preferred over OTC medications for children older than 12 months, as it reduces cough frequency more effectively than no treatment or placebos. Learn the exact bedtime dose (0.5β2 teaspoons) and the critical safety contraindication: never give honey to infants younger than 12 months due to the fatal risk of botulism. We cover how to counsel parents on mucus clearance and protecting dental health from prolonged use.
Keywords: #AMCClinicalExam #PaediatricURTI #HoneyforCough #OSCEManagement #IMGAustralia #BotulismPrevention #PaediatricNocturnalCough
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Pro Tip: In your OSCE, if a parent asks for a cough suppressant for a toddler, always check the child's age first. Explicitly stating that you are recommending honey because it is "less risky than OTC medications" and has "NHMRC Level 1 evidence" demonstrates the high-level safety and evidence-based knowledge examiners expect.
Also, visit the Sore Throat topic below:
S1E77 - Paediatric Fever and Sore Throat
π If this clinical topic interests you, visit the full webpage for extended notes and additional exam-oriented resources: URTI Clinical Skills Navigator
π§ Episodes in β β β β Season 1β β β β (150 clinical scenarios) have been indexed by topic, patient group, discipline, setting, and more to support targeted learning. Use the filters to locate discussions relevant to your study or clinical training.