Question #410ad

1 Answer
Sep 25, 2017

Here's what I got.

Explanation:

You can start by calculating the total number of grams of this drug that the patient needs in 11 day.

Since you know that the dosage is set at "1.9 g"1.9 g every "6 h"6 h, you can say that the patient will need

"1.9 g/6 h" = "1.9 g"/(6color(red)(cancel(color(black)("hours")))) * (24color(red)(cancel(color(black)("hours"))))/"1 day" = "7.6 g"/"1 day" = "7.6 g/day"

Next, use the fact that

color(blue)(ul(color(black)("1 g" = 10^3color(white)(.)"mg")))

to convert the sample to milligrams

7.6 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))) * (10^3color(white)(.)"mg")/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g")))) = 7.6 * 10^3color(white)(.)"mg"

So, you know that your patient needs 7.6 * 10^3 "mg" of this drug per day. To find the number of tablets needed to deliver this sample to the patient, use the fact that 1 tablet has a mass of "500 mg".

7.6 * 10^3 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mg"))) * "1 tablet"/(500color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g")))) = "15.2 tablets"

Now, if you cannot split a table into 5 equal parts so that you can give

15.2 = 15 1/5

tablets to the patient--which would be consistent with the fact that the answer must have 1 significant figure--then my guess is that "1.9 g" is a typo and that the actual value is "1.0 g".

In this case, you have

"1.0 g/6 h = 4 g/day"

which means that you will need

4 * 10^3 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mg"))) * "1 tablet"/(500color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mg")))) = "8 tablets"

Since the values given to you justify a 1-sig-fig answer, this is most likely what the problem looked like.