A patient in acute bronchospasm requires a weight-based nebulised medication. The patient weighs 82 kg. Before drawing up the drug, the crew needs the total milligrams and the volume to draw from the stock concentration to confirm the dose is correct and within protocol limits.
Total mg = Weight (kg) × Dose (mg/kg)
Volume (mL) = Total mg ÷ Concentration (mg/mL)
Example (morphine): 80 kg · 0.1 mg/kg · 10 mg/mL stock → 8 mg → 0.8 mL
1 What this calculator does
Calculates the total dose in milligrams and the volume in millilitres to administer from a known drug concentration (mg/mL) and patient weight. Supports weight-based dose calculation for any drug requiring mg/kg dosing. Supports metric and imperial weight entry.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Total dose (mg) = Patient weight (kg) x Dose (mg/kg)
Volume (mL) = Total dose (mg) / Stock concentration (mg/mL)
Always double-check: confirm drug, dose, route, concentration and weight with partner before administration
Weight-based dosing ensures the administered dose is proportional to the patient's body mass, minimising both underdosing (therapeutic failure) and overdosing (adverse effects). The volume calculation converts the required dose from milligrams to a measurable volume in the syringe or nebuliser, using the specific concentration of the available stock. In prehospital settings where multiple concentrations of the same drug may be carried, explicitly stating the concentration used prevents critical errors.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
Total dose: 82 x 0.01 = 0.82 mg | Volume: 0.82 / 1 = 0.82 mLTotal dose: 18 x 15 = 270 mg | Volume: 270 / 50 = 5.4 mLVolume from Stock A: 60 / 50 = 1.2 mL | Volume from Stock B: 60 / 10 = 6.0 mL | Same dose, 5x different volume4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Using an estimated or incorrect patient weight without documentation | Accepting verbal weight without verification or using a visual estimate without a structured tool | Dose error proportional to weight error -- a 25% weight error produces a 25% dose error | Obtain actual weight when possible. For paediatric patients, use the Broselow tape. For adults unable to self-report, use Broselow adult chart or IDEAL body weight estimation. Document clearly that weight is estimated and the method used. |
| Not confirming the concentration of the specific ampoule before calculating volume | Assuming the concentration matches the protocol reference or the box | 10-fold or other major dosing error if a different concentration is inadvertently used | Before entering the concentration into the calculator, read the mg/mL value from the specific ampoule in hand. Confirm with your partner. This is especially critical for drugs that come in multiple concentrations. |
| Not verifying the calculated volume against a plausibility check | Accepting the calculated volume without a sanity check | A calculation or entry error produces an implausible volume that is administered without question | Apply a plausibility check to every calculated volume: an adult IV dose in the mL range 0.1-20 mL is typically within plausible range. A calculated dose of 0.02 mL or 50 mL from a standard syringe should trigger an immediate recheck of the inputs. |
| Not documenting the time of administration and dose given | Prioritising patient care over contemporaneous documentation in a high-acuity scene | Incomplete medication record -- subsequent clinicians cannot safely give additional doses | At minimum, document drug name, dose in mg, volume administered, route, time and clinician ID before leaving the scene or immediately on transport. Use the partner system -- one clinician administers, one documents. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
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