Not Applicable
Not Applicable
The embodiments disclosed herein relate to a device for dispensing medicine to an infant.
Administering a liquid medicine to an infant can be frustrating and often times messy. Prior art methods of administering liquid medicine to the infant include a syringe, dropper and small spoon. Unfortunately, the liquid medicine may have a taste which is offensive to the infant, so that the infant spits out the liquid medicine immediately upon administration. Another deficiency in prior art devices for administering medicine to infant is that it is difficult to gage the amount of liquid medicine that has already been administered to the infant if the infant spits out a portion of the liquid medicine inserted into the infant's mouth.
Accordingly, there is a need in the art for an improved infant medicine dispenser.
The embodiments disclosed herein address the needs discussed above, discussed below and those that are known in the art.
An infant medicine dispenser may be shaped as a pacifier with a distal tip having a sealable opening. Normally, the opening is sealed so that liquid medicine may be stored in a reservoir in the nipple prior to administration to the infant. An opening behind the nipple allows the user to fill the liquid medicine in the reservoir. A cover may be inserted into the opening to provide a liquid tight seal and to prevent inadvertent spills when the infant medicine dispenser is inadvertently knocked out of the user's hand or knocked out of the infant's mouth. To administer the liquid medicine, the user inserts the nipple into the infant's mouth. The infant's sucking reflex is triggered so that the opening at the distal tip of the nipple is opened and the liquid medicine flows there through into the infant's mouth. The infant continues to suck on the infant medicine dispenser so that the infant swallows the liquid medicine. The cover may create a generally air tight seal with the opening so that suction is created when the infant sucks on the nipple. This may also encourage the infant to continue sucking on the nipple and swallow the liquid medicine.
More particularly, an infant medicine dispenser is disclosed. The dispenser may comprise a pacifier and a cover. The pacifier may define a nipple and a flange. The flange may be attached to a base of the nipple. The nipple may have a slit at a distal tip of the nipple. The nipple may have an interior reservoir with an opening opposite the distal tip of the nipple. The slit may form a generally liquid tight seal so that liquid medicine stored in the reservoir does not leak out of the nipple while filling the reservoir with the liquid medicine and while the infant latches onto the nipple.
The cover may be sized and configured to plug an opening leading to the reservoir so that the liquid medicine does not spill if the pacifier is inadvertently dislodged from the infant's mouth. The liquid medicine generally flows out of the reservoir into the infant's mouth after the infant latches onto the nipple and begins to suck on the nipple.
The slit may be a single straight slit, a single curved slit or a cross slit. If the slit is the single straight slit, then the single straight slit may be positioned vertically in the infant's mouth so that the single straight slit opens up when the infant begins to suck on the nipple. More particularly, the single straight slit may open up when the infant compresses the nipple with his/her tongue and a top of the infant's mouth during the sucking process. If the slit is the cross slit, then the cross slit may open up when the infant begins to suck on the nipple regardless of an angular orientation of the nipple. If the slit is the single curved slit, then the single curved slit may open up when the infant begins to suck on the nipple regardless of an angular orientation of the nipple.
The cover may be removably attached to the opening of the nipple. Alternatively, the cover may be integral with the pacifier. By way of example and not limitation, the cover may have a slit which is normally closed and capable of being traversed to an opened position by squeezing the pacifier.
The interior reservoir of the nipple may hold three (3) ml. The nipple may be semi transparent to transparent. The nipple may have graduations for indicating an amount of liquid medicine in the nipple. The level of the liquid medicine may be seen through the nipple.
The opening of the interior reservoir may have threads. The dispenser may further have an extension tube threadably engageable to the threads of the opening of the interior reservoir to enlarge a capacity of the interior reservoir. The cover may be removably attached to a proximal end of the tube.
The tube may extend past the flange opposite the nipple. The tube may also have graduations for indicating an amount of liquid medicine in the nipple and the tube. Alternatively, the tube may be integrally formed with the flange on an opposite side of the nipple to enlarge a capacity of the interior reservoir.
These and other features and advantages of the various embodiments disclosed herein will be better understood with respect to the following description and drawings, in which like numbers refer to like parts throughout, and in which:
Referring now to the drawings, the infant medicine dispenser 10 includes a nipple 12 and a flange 14. The nipple 12 has a cross slit 16 which provides for a generally liquid tight seal and access to the interior reservoir 18 of the nipple 12. A cover 20 seals off an opening 22 after the liquid medicine is disposed within the interior reservoir 18. The liquid infant medicine dispenser 10 is now made ready to administer liquid medicine to the infant. The nipple 12 of the infant medicine dispenser is inserted into the infant's mouth. The sucking or stripping reflex of the infant is triggered which draws the liquid medicine from the interior reservoir 18 through the cross slit 16 and into the infant's mouth. If the infant inadvertently knocks the infant medicine dispenser 10 out of his/her own mouth, the liquid medicine will not spill since the cover 20 holds the liquid medicine within the interior reservoir 18 and the cross slit 16 is immediately closed once again. The adult can attempt a second administration by inserting the nipple 12 once again into the infant's mouth without having to guess how much liquid medicine the infant has already taken.
More particularly, the infant medicine dispenser 10 includes the nipple 12 and the flange 14. The flange 14 is generally larger than the infant's mouth so that the infant medicine dispenser 10 cannot be inadvertently swallowed by the infant. The flange 14 is preferably circular in shape, but may have any other shape such as square, triangular, octagonal, pentagonal, etc. The flange 14 is also generally perpendicular to a central axis 24 of the nipple 12. The nipple 12 protrudes from the flange 14 and is inserted into the infant's mouth when administering the liquid medicine. The nipple 12 may have a nipple configuration as shown in
When the liquid medicine is filled into the interior reservoir 18, the nipple 12 holds the liquid medicine therein. The nipple 12, at its distal tip, has an opening 16 which is normally closed but is open when the infant closes down on the nipple 12 with his/her tongue or begins to suck on the nipple 12. After filling the interior reservoir 18 with liquid medicine, an opening 22 at a rear side of the nipple 12 may be closed by a cover 20 disposable inside of the opening 22. The cover 20 may have a disc 26 and a handle 28. The user may grab the handle 28 and insert the disc 26 into the opening 20. The disc 26 may be sized and configured to the opening 22 so as to form a generally liquid tight seal there between.
Referring now to
The cover 20 may be secured to the flange 14 through a leash 38 so that the cover 20 does not become a chocking hazard.
Preferably, the nipple 12, flange 14, leash 38 and the cover 20 are all fabricated from a generally soft and flexible material such as silicone. However, other materials are also contemplated that are known in the art or designed in the future.
The nipple 12 may be generally semi-transparent so that a level of the liquid medicine within the interior reservoir 18 is viewable externally. The nipple 12 may additionally have graduations 39 which indicate the amount of fluid or liquid medicine within the liquid reservoir 18.
Referring now to
In relation to
In all of the embodiments shown in
During use, the infant medicine dispenser 10 is utilized to administer liquid medicine to an infant. The cover 20 is removed from the opening 22. The nipple 12 is inverted so that the nipple 12 is pointed downward and the opening 22 is pointed upward. At this point, the slit 16, 16a, 16b are in the normally closed position. The liquid medicine is poured, injected or otherwise disposed within the interior reservoir 18 by way of the opening 22. The weight of the liquid medicine urges the liquid medicine out through the slits 16, 16a, 16b and the aperture 42. However, the slits 16, 16a, 16b are closed so as to form a liquid tight seal. With respect to the aperture 42 shown in
As shown in
After the liquid medicine is disposed within the interior reservoir 18 the cover 20 is disposed or inserted into the opening 22. As shown in
Optionally, the disc 26 of the cover 20 may be configured to form an air tight seal with the opening 22. By way of example and not limitation, the exterior surface 44 of the disc 26 may be smooth. Also, an interior smooth surface 46 of the interior reservoir 18 may be smooth. The diameter 30 of the disc 26 may be slightly larger than the interior diameter 32 of the opening 22 so that the disc 26 fits snuggly within the opening 22. A small air leak may exist. However, the infant would still be able to create suction when sucking on the nipple 12. Other ways of creating an air tight seal between the disc 26 and the opening 22 is contemplated such as by forming a thread on the exterior surface 44 of the disc 26 that mate with a thread formed on the interior surface 46 of the opening 22.
After use, the cover 20 may be removed from the opening 22 by grabbing the handle 28 and pulling the cover 20 off of the opening 22. The infant medicine dispenser 10 may be washed or sterilized for subsequent.
Referring now to
Referring now to
The above description is given by way of example, and not limitation. Given the above disclosure, one skilled in the art could devise variations that are within the scope and spirit of the invention disclosed herein, including various ways of forming the dispenser. Further, the various features of the embodiments disclosed herein can be used alone, or in varying combinations with each other and are not intended to be limited to the specific combination described herein. Thus, the scope of the claims is not to be limited by the illustrated embodiments.