Dear all:
In case some of you are wondering whether or not you should keep your scales or not, I
found the source of the error and feel much better that at least the pediatrician and I
were consistent on this particular error. When you see an error that is consistent and
remains the same no matter what you do, that means something is wrong somewhere in
the calculations.
The source of the error was a flip in the numerator and denominator. It truly is about
28.3 g/oz or if you flip it over, about 35.2 oz/kg. That was the really sneaky part that
slowed me down in catching my math error since it was close enough to the 30 g per
ounce that I didn't recheck my numerator and denominator and instead blamed the
conversions.
There still seems to be a little bit of difference in the conversions used in the CDC and
WHO charts --- at least graphically.
Thank you to those of you who also checked your own scales and helped me figure out
my glitch.
Glad I'm not calculating anyone's medication dosages!
Best, Susan
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