Children's Medication Struggles
2025-10-21 01:45:55

Over 70% of Parents Struggle with Children's Medication: A Survey Report

The Challenges of Giving Medications to Children



A recent survey conducted through HugKum, targeting parents with children aged 0 to 12, reveals significant insights into the common struggles faced when attempting to give medications to children. With 684 valid responses collected from July 2 to July 22, 2025, the survey uncovers a myriad of challenges that parents face, along with innovative solutions they've developed to tackle these everyday issues.

Section One: Difficulties in Managing Children's Illnesses and Medication



The first set of questions aimed to understand the specific troubles parents encounter when their children fall ill.

Key Insights:


1. Transporting to the Doctor: The most significant challenge identified by the parents was taking their children to the hospital. Balancing work commitments and household responsibilities with doctor visits places a substantial burden on many families.
2. Resistance to Medication: Another major concern is the difficulty children face in taking medicine. Over 70% of respondents indicated that they struggled to get their kids to swallow medications properly.
3. Powdered Medications: Funneled down by medication forms, powdered medications garnered the highest number of complaints concerning ease of administration, with many children unable to mask the unpleasant tastes and therefore resisting the intake.
4. Age-Specific Struggles: The peak age for medication-related challenges was identified as between 1 to 3 years. During this crucial stage, children's taste buds develop, and they become adept at recognizing unpleasant flavors, complicating the administering of medications. The famous


画像1

画像2

画像3

画像4

画像5

画像6

画像7

画像8

画像9

画像10

画像11

画像12

Topics Other)

【About Using Articles】

You can freely use the title and article content by linking to the page where the article is posted.
※ Images cannot be used.

【About Links】

Links are free to use.