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Tablet & Oral Liquid Dose

How many tablets or mL to give. SR ÷ SS × Volume formula — works for tablets, liquids and injections. Free nursing calculator for tablet & oral liquid dose. AU an...

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Medication round, three patients in a row with different concentrations on the same drug. You need the draw-up volumes before you open a single blister pack.

Tablet & Oral Liquid Dose
Medication
Strength Required — prescribed
mg per tablet or per stock mL
1 = tablet · 5 = 5 mL liquid
Amount = (SR ÷ SS) × Stock volume Example: SR 750 mg, SS 500 mg tablet → (750÷500)×1 = 1.5 tablets
Liquid: SR 250 mg, SS 125 mg/5mL → (250÷125)×5 = 10 mL
💡 SUNRISE/SUNSET: Strength Required ÷ Stock Strength — applies to all drug calculations.
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Calculates how many tablets to give, or how many mL to draw up for an oral liquid or injection, from a prescriber's order. Uses the SR ÷ SS × Volume formula — the universal nursing dose calculation.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Volume to give = (Strength Required ÷ Strength of Stock) × Volume of Stock Tablets: Strength Required ÷ Strength of Stock (no volume component)

This formula works for every solid and liquid dose form. 'Strength Required' (SR) is what the prescriber ordered. 'Strength of Stock' (SS) is the concentration on the label of what you have. For liquids, you multiply by the volume in which that stock strength is dissolved. For tablets, if the answer is not a whole number or simple half, query the prescription — most tablets should not be split unless scored.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Tablet dose — whole tablet
Given: Ordered: 500 mg · Stock: 500 mg/tablet
Working: 500 ÷ 500 × 1
Answer: 1 tablet
💡 Straightforward. Confirm tablet is the correct formulation (e.g. not slow-release).
Standard
Oral liquid — suspension
Given: Ordered: 250 mg · Stock: 125 mg / 5 mL
Working: 250 ÷ 125 × 5 = 2 × 5
Answer: 10 mL
💡 Use an oral syringe for accurate measurement. Shake suspension before measuring.
Advanced
Injection from ampoule
Given: Ordered: 75 mg morphine · Stock: 10 mg/mL
Working: 75 ÷ 10 × 1 = 7.5 mL
Answer: 7.5 mL
💡 Morphine 75 mg is above typical single-dose range — verify the prescription before drawing up. Two-nurse check required.

4 Sanity check

Tablet result check
Should be 0.5, 1, or 2 tablets for most drugs
Result > 2 tablets of same strength: query the prescription or check stock concentration.
Liquid result check
Should be between 1 mL and 20 mL for most oral doses
Under 1 mL is difficult to measure accurately. Over 20 mL is impractical — consider tablet form.
Injection result check
Usually 0.5–10 mL for most IM/IV doses
Over 10 mL for a single injection is unusual — verify before proceeding.
Mental cross-check
Result × SS = SR (always verify)
Multiply your answer by the stock strength — you should get back the ordered dose.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Using the wrong stock concentration Multiple strengths of same drug in the drug room 2× or 0.5× the ordered dose Read the label every time. Do not rely on memory or colour of packaging.
Forgetting the volume component for liquids Applying tablet formula to a liquid Result in mg not mL — wrong unit For liquids: always include the volume per stock strength (e.g. 5 mL in '125 mg/5 mL')
Calculating a half-tablet of a modified-release formulation Result of 0.5 tablet on a non-scored or SR tablet Dose dumping or unpredictable absorption Modified-release and enteric-coated tablets must never be split — always check formulation type
Not verifying with a second nurse for high-alert drugs Time pressure Calculation errors go uncaught on narrow-therapeutic-index medications Morphine, insulin, heparin, chemotherapy: mandatory independent double-check before every dose