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Defined Daily Doses



Defined daily doses (DDDs) are a WHO statistical measure of drug consumption. DDDs are used to standardise the comparative usage of various drugs between themselves or between different healthcare environments.

The problem is that different medication can be of different strengths and different potencies. Simply comparing 1g of one, with 1mg of another can be confusing, particularly if different countries use different doses.

DDDs aims to solve this by relating all drug use to a standardised unit which is analogous to one day's worth

The formula for calculating DDDs is as follows.

Drug\ Usage(DDDs) = \left( \frac{Items\ issued  \times Amount\ of\ Drug\ per\ item}{WHO\ DDD\ Measure } \right)

For example, paracetamol has a DDD of 3g. This is equivalent to six standard (500mg) tablets. If a patient consumes twenty four (500mg) tablets (i.e. 12g of paracetamol in total)over the space of six days, he can have said to have consumed four DDDs of this drug.

(12g(totalamountofdrug) / 3g(amountofdruginaDDD) = NumberofDDDs

See also:

  • ADQ (Pharmacy)(Average Daily Quantity) for a British alternative
  • World Health Organisation Collaborative Centre for more on this.
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Defined_Daily_Doses". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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