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Dose Frequency Converter

Convert between dosing frequency abbreviations and dosing intervals in hours and per day. Free pharmacy calculator for dose frequency converter. TGA and FDA refer...

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New admission, 14 medications, and the prescription uses a mix of abbreviations — QD, BD, TDS, QID, PRN q4h. You need the doses-per-day count for each before entering into the dispensing system.

Dose Frequency Converter
Dispensing
Dose per admin = Total daily dose ÷ Doses per day Doses per day: OD=1 · BD=2 · TDS=3 · QID=4 · q4h=6 · q6h=4 · q8h=3 · q12h=2
💡 Always confirm dose per administration is within therapeutic range before dispensing — especially for narrow therapeutic index drugs.
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Converts standard dosing frequency abbreviations to doses per day and dosing interval in hours. Works in both directions: abbreviation to interval, or doses-per-day to standard label instruction. Covers all common pharmacy frequency codes.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Doses per day = 24 ÷ Dosing interval (hours) Daily dose = Dose per admin × Doses per day

Frequency abbreviations are a persistent source of dispensing and administration errors. 'QD' (once daily) has been mistaken for 'QID' (four times daily) — a 4× dosing error. 'OD' is ambiguous (once daily or overdose in some contexts). The ISMP and TGA both recommend writing out 'once daily', 'twice daily' etc. in full on prescriptions, but abbreviations remain prevalent in practice.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Standard twice-daily antibiotic
Given: Frequency: BD (bis die — twice daily)
Working: 24 ÷ 2 = 12-hour interval
Answer: 2 doses/day · every 12 hours · label: 'twice daily'
💡 BD, BID and BD all mean twice daily. Document the full instruction on the dispensing label.
Standard
Four times daily analgesic
Given: Frequency: QID (quater in die — four times daily)
Working: 24 ÷ 4 = 6-hour interval
Answer: 4 doses/day · every 6 hours · label: 'four times daily'
💡 QID typically means every 6 hours around the clock, not just during waking hours — clarify with prescriber if relevant.
Advanced
PRN with frequency limit
Given: Frequency: PRN q4h (as required, max every 4 hours)
Working: Max: 24 ÷ 4 = 6 doses/day maximum
Answer: Up to 6 doses/day · minimum 4-hour interval
💡 Days supply for PRN: always calculate using the maximum stated frequency, not expected usage.

4 Sanity check

Once daily (QD/OD/Mane)
1 dose/day · 24-hour interval
QD, once daily, mane (morning) all mean 1/day.
Twice daily (BD/BID)
2 doses/day · 12-hour interval
Three times daily (TDS/TID)
3 doses/day · 8-hour interval
TDS = ter die sumendum (Latin). TID = ter in die.
Four times daily (QID)
4 doses/day · 6-hour interval
Not to be confused with QD (once daily) — a documented source of fatal medication errors.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
QD vs QID confusion Handwriting or font ambiguity 4× intended dose — potentially fatal for digoxin, warfarin, opioids Never abbreviate once-daily as 'QD' — write 'daily' or 'once daily' in full. TGA and ISMP both recommend avoiding QD.
OD interpreted as overdose Context ambiguity Misinterpretation of instruction Use 'once daily' or 'mane' instead of OD. In clinical settings OD can mean overdose — avoid ambiguity.
Assuming QID means 'during waking hours only' Patient convenience interpretation Drug underexposed if 4th dose missed at night (e.g. antibiotics, antiepileptics) QID means every 6 hours around the clock unless the prescriber specifies otherwise. Clarify for antimicrobials and anti-epileptics specifically.
PRN days supply underestimated Calculating based on expected use not maximum Insufficient quantity dispensed — patient runs out early For PRN medications, always calculate days supply using the maximum prescribed frequency