doosis
Doo sis is a term used in pharmacology and clinical planning to describe the structured process of determining and administering drug doses to achieve a balance between efficacy and safety. It encompasses selecting an initial dose, deciding on maintenance dosing, dosing intervals, and routes of administration, as well as adjustments based on patient response and tolerability. The concept emphasizes tailoring regimens to individual factors rather than applying fixed, one-size-fits-all schedules.
Etymology and usage: The term is not standardized in medical dictionaries and has no universally agreed-upon
Core components: Dosing strategies typically integrate pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic considerations, therapeutic drug monitoring, and patient-specific variables
Applications and limitations: Doosis is discussed in clinical pharmacology, oncology, and antimicrobial stewardship as a way
See also: dosage, pharmacokinetics, therapeutic drug monitoring.