Newborn Essentials
A Fuss-Free Way to Give Baby Medicine!
This product is so effective because baby doesn’t know he’s drinking medicine!
The Medibottle is simply amazing. Typically, regular doses of medicine are met with firm resistance by baby once he or she realizes what’s coming in that syringe or dosage cup. He or she doesn’t like the taste so out come the cries, button lips, pushing away, etc. Your baby will try everything and anything to stop you from putting that yucky stuff into his or her mouth. Of course, this is frustrating to mom and dad, especially when twenty minutes later they’ve yet to get any medicine into baby’s mouth!
The Medibottle is a baby bottle with a medicine syringe built into the center. The way it works is actually quite simple: Put an ounce of your baby’s favorite liquid into the bottle and the dose of medicine into the syringe. Once baby starts drinking the liquid, you give short presses on the plunger and "little squirts" of medicine squirt into the tip of the nipple.
These "little squirts" (about 5 drops of medicine per squirt) are swallowed and washed down immediately by the liquid that follows on the back end of the sip. It works because it gives very little time for baby’s taste buds to sense the medication.
Here are some great features of the Medibottle:
- Baby Won’t Taste Medicine
- Medicine Isn’t Diluted
- Clinically Proven Most Effective
- Pediatrician Approved
- Easy and Accurate - Medibottle Delivers!
Clinically tested in hospitals, Medibottle ranked #1 in effectiveness at 93% vs. the 2nd place oral dispenser at 57%. Infant acceptance using Medibottle was also 329% greater!
A Mom and Dad invented Medibottle out of a need to help their own baby take medicine. Medibottle has been clinically tested and approved in hospitals, featured in more than a dozen medical journals, and on the front page of the Wall Street Journal. The Medibottle has also been named Invention of the Year, Best Product of the Year, featured on Good Morning America, The Rosie O'Donnell Show, CBS This Morning, as well as CNN, ABC, NBC, FOX, and WGN networks










