Use these nursing scenarios to sanity-check the formula, then load the same values back into the calculator with one click.
Body Weight
This is the conversion many nurses do before any mg/kg medication calculation.
Many facilities require kilograms as the charted medication-calculation weight.
Dose Conversion
Metric staircase conversions help prevent 1000-fold dosing errors with medication strengths.
This example shows why labeling and reading the metric prefix correctly matters so much.
Neonatal Weight
Newborn and NICU weights are often charted in grams but discussed in kilograms or pounds.
Seeing the gram, kilogram, and pound values together is useful for neonatal handoff communication.
Mass conversion uses a shared base unit so the same source value can be translated accurately across micrograms, milligrams, grams, kilograms, ounces, and pounds. This is especially helpful when bedside weights and medication strengths are written in different systems.
Result = Value × (From Unit Factor ÷ To Unit Factor)
Enter a numeric value and select the source unit. The calculator instantly converts to all six mass units used in clinical practice: microgram (mcg), milligram (mg), gram (g), kilogram (kg), ounce (oz), and pound (lb). High-precision arithmetic ensures clinically accurate results.
A patient weighs 154 lb. Convert to kilograms for a weight-based dosing calculation.
Many facilities require documenting weight in kilograms to reduce conversion errors at the point of care.
A conversion error between mass units can result in a 1,000-fold dosing error (e.g., confusing milligrams with micrograms). The metric staircase — mcg, mg, g, kg — moves by factors of 1,000. Ounces and pounds follow different conversion factors and are used primarily for patient weight in the US.
In everyday clinical use, mass and weight are used interchangeably. Technically, mass is the amount of matter in an object (measured in kilograms), while weight is the gravitational force on that mass (measured in newtons). For medication dosing, the distinction does not affect calculations.
A conversion error between units can result in a 1,000-fold dosing error (e.g., confusing milligrams with micrograms). Such errors can cause serious patient harm. Always double-check conversions, especially with high-alert medications.
Divide the weight in pounds by 2.2046 to get kilograms. For example, a 154 lb patient weighs approximately 69.85 kg. Many facilities require documenting weight in kilograms for weight-based medication dosing to reduce conversion errors at the point of care.
A common general formula is Result = Value × (From Factor ÷ To Factor). Many calculators first convert the value into a shared base unit such as grams, then convert outward into each target unit from that base.
Kilograms are the standard reference unit for many medication monographs and weight-based dosing formulas. If pounds are used by mistake where kilograms are expected, the dose can be significantly overstated and become unsafe.
The riskiest mistakes usually involve metric prefixes, especially confusing mcg with mg or mg with g. Those errors can create 1000-fold dosing problems, which is why metric conversions deserve deliberate double-checks with high-alert medications.
Reference: International System of Units (SI) mass-conversion standards and standard medication-safety guidance for kg-based dosing and metric-prefix verification.