One anon dose is 1.5 times the horse dose.
e.g. if you weigh 100 lbs the equivalent anon dose is based on 150 lbs
Be careful what you're saying here. This is confusing. Make sure ppl understand a full tube of Durvet is for a 1250 lb horse. So a person should take a dose corresponding to what percentage their weight is of 1250. That is, if they weigh 250 lbs, then 1/5 of a tube. You seem to be saying they should calculate this after multiplying their weight x 1.5? So a 250-lb person should measure a dose as if they weighed 375 lbs? That is too confusing, if that's what you're saying. You need to clarify.
Every other guidance I've seen says figure the dose based on your actual weight.
One anon dose is 1.5 times the horse dose.
e.g. if you weigh 100 lbs the equivalent anon dose is based on 150 lbs
Be careful what you're saying here. This is confusing. Make sure ppl understand a full tube of Durvet is for a 1250 lb horse. So a person should take a dose corresponding to what percentage their weight is of 1250. That is, if they weigh 250 lbs, then 1/5 of a tube. You seem to be saying they should calculate this after multiplying their weight x 1.5? So a 250-lb person should measure a dose as if they weighed 375 lbs? That is too confusing, if that's what you're saying. You need to clarify.
One anon dose is 1.5 times the horse dose.
e.g. if you weigh 100 lbs the equivalent anon dose is based on 150 lbs
Be careful what you're saying here. This is confusing. Make sure ppl understand a full tube of Durvet is for a 1250 lb horse. So a person should take a dose corresponding to what percentage their weight is of 1250. That is, if they weigh 250 lbs, then 1/5 of a tube. You seem to be saying they should calculate this after multiplying their weight x 1.5? So a 250-lb person should measure a dose as if they weighed 375 lbs? That is too confusing, if that's what you're saying. You need to clarify.