Hospital's Mistaken Medication Overdose of Dennis Quaid's 2-Week Old Twins Underscores a Big Problem in Health System
Each year at least 1.5 million Americans are injured - and 15,000 die - after receiving the wrong medication or an incorrect dose, says the federal Institute of Medicine. Such incidents have more than doubled in the past decade. Causes include pharmacists stocking drugs improperly, nurses not double-checking to make sure they are dispensing the proper medication, illegible handwriting by doctors, and similarities between names of different drugs. In the incident involving Dennis Quaid's 2-week old twins, they were given 1,000 times the intended dosage of the blood thinner Heparin at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, one of the top hospitals in the country, which has called it a "preventable error." The babies were supposed to have received 10 units per millimeter of the anticoagulant to keep their IVs from clotting, but instead were given 10,000 units per millimeter. This case is similar to a situation that occurred at Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis last year when thre