I’m fresh off 15 years as a paramedic. It kind of depends on the context. If we’re pushing a fractional volume of a container (let’s say a 10 ml amp of epi 1:10000) then I might say “push 1 ml”, because it’s the easiest unit to understand in that moment (the amps are marked on the side in MLs). USUALLY, though, I would say/report that I gave 50mg of benadryl or 0.3mg of epi or what have you, because the mass dose of the drug USUALLY matters more than the volume of drug solution (in particular because you can have the same drug available in multiple concentrations or forms).
I’m fresh off 15 years as a paramedic. It kind of depends on the context. If we’re pushing a fractional volume of a container (let’s say a 10 ml amp of epi 1:10000) then I might say “push 1 ml”, because it’s the easiest unit to understand in that moment (the amps are marked on the side in MLs). USUALLY, though, I would say/report that I gave 50mg of benadryl or 0.3mg of epi or what have you, because the mass dose of the drug USUALLY matters more than the volume of drug solution (in particular because you can have the same drug available in multiple concentrations or forms).