1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a liquid medication dispensing device for administering medication(s) to infants, in particular a plastic insert that is used with a standard baby nipple and bottle so that the medication is mixed with liquid infant food and administered through the nipple during the first portion of an infants feeding.
There is often a need to administer medication(s) to infants under the age of 1 year old, specifically to administer said medication(s) simultaneously and mixed with an infants formula or breast milk during feeding. This need arises because an infant is more likely to ingest the medication(s) if said medication(s) is mixed with breast milk or formula, especially if said medication(s)/food mixture is administered through a nipple.
There are several advantages in administering medication(s) if medication(s) is mixed with formula or breast milk or other liquid food and administered through a nipple. Medication(s) administered directly is often rejected by the infant for many reasons; including flavor, temperature and/or consistency. Furthermore, infant habits of ingesting food (or medicine) via spoon, dropper or syringe are not fully developed resulting in the infant rejecting the dose. In return, caretakers will mix medication(s) with formula or breast milk during feeding. This can make it difficult to determine how much medication has been administered. A typical feeding can be 2-8 ounces and it is not uncommon for the infant to stop feeding before the entire feeding is consumed or for the infant to “spit up” the last portion of the feeding.
Furthermore, there is a cost advantage if standard nipples and bottles are used as an integral part of the liquid medication dispensing device. This eliminates the expense of purchasing a specialized feeding system that is only used for administering liquid medication(s).
2. Description of the Prior Art
The prior art describes several liquid medication dispensers that attempt to resolve these problems. For example, Burchett et al, U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,383,906 and 5,487,750 and 5,824,012 and 6,200,295B1 describe a liquid medication dispenser that includes a nursing bottle, syringe and nipple as a complex assembly. Medication must be continuously feed into the nipple via the syringe which could cause poor mixing of medication and formula. Furthermore, this device has several components which make it difficult to clean and expensive to produce. Finally, the Burchett patents do not insure that the medication will be administered during the initial portion of the feeding, making it difficult to determine how much medication has been administered in the event that the infant spits up near the end of feeding as is typical.
Botts, U.S. Pat. No. 6,270,519B1 teaches a similar device to Burchett et al that includes a complete bottle, nipple, syringe assembly. The Botts patent does not achieve mixing of food and medication.
Martin, U.S. Pat. No. 5,129,532 teaches a specially designed nipple that includes a sealed upper and lower housing with an inlet in the lower housing for inserting medication into the interior of the device. The upper portion being a nipple design. This does not accommodate for mixing with food via a bottle.
Liu et al, U.S. Pat. No. 5,353,964 teaches a twin bottle with a slidable shutter for controlling the flow of two liquids from two separate containers disposed inside each other. This device is not suited for administering small doses of medication because the medication will tend to adhere to the side walls of the container making it very difficult to insure proper dosing.
There are several other patents that include exterior dispensing devices such as syringes or droppers requiring the user to inject the medication during feeding. These include Lemmons U.S. Pat. No. 4,493,348, Krammer, U.S. Pat. No. 2,680,441 and Roskilly, U.S. Pat. No. 4,821,895. None of these patents provide for use of an inexpensive insert that is used with a standard nipple and bottle for administering liquid medication mixed with infant food during the initial portion of the infants feeding.
The present invention relates to a liquid medication dispensing device for mixing and administering medication(s) with liquid food. The dispensing device of the present invention may comprise a plastic cone shaped insert. The insert makes mechanical contact with a standard feeding nipple when inserted into said feeding nipple such that the insert forms a liquid seal along the full perimeter of the insert and the nipple. The dispensing device further comprises: a) an inlet port in flow communication with a standard feeding bottle when nipple is turned upside down, as in when used during feeding an infant; b) an outlet port in flow communication with the inlet port when nipple is turned upside down, said inlet port having larger diameter than said outlet port so that formula or breast milk can flow from said bottle to said inlet port and to said outlet port when turned upside down, as in when used during feeding an infant.
When the insert of the liquid medication dispensing device is in mechanical contact with a nipple, said inserted device forms two chambers, (an upper and lower chamber) in said nipple. The upper and lower chambers are in flow communication with each other by means of the inlet and outlet ports of the dispensing device when nipple is turned upside down as in when used during feeding an infant.
As used herein the term “mechanical contact” is used to mean the points at which two or more parts touch each other to form a seal. The term “flow communication” is used to describe the pathway by which the liquid flows within the embodiment of the device. The term “upside down” is used to describe the orientation(s) of a feeding bottle and nipple during use in infant feeding. The term “standard” is used to describe a typical nipple and bottle that is used to feed an infant.
The present invention relates to a liquid medication dispensing device for mixing and administering medication(s) with formula, breast milk or other liquid to an infant. The dispensing device of the present invention may comprise a plastic cone shaped insert 3 (shown in
When the dispensing device is in mechanical contact on the sealing rim 9 with a nipple 4, said inserted device forms two chambers, (an upper chamber 8 (shown in
Medication is placed into the upper chamber 8 of the nipple 4 such that the medication(s) is contained in the upper chamber 8 of the dispensing device and nipple 4. The medication(s) can be placed into the nipple 4 first with the device being inserted second, or the medication(s) can be inserted into the upper chamber 8 through the outlet port 7. Either way, the medication(s) is contained into the upper chamber 8 such that it is not in flow communication with the lower chamber 5. The medication is said to not be in flow communication because the medication cannot flow from the upper chamber 8 into the lower chamber 5 of the device.
The nipple 4 with device inserted is attached to the bottle top 2 (shown in