Wk_12_HW_Dennis_Quaid
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Dec 6, 2023
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docx
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Uploaded by Justme2023
Anne Vitasek
Due Saturday 11/12/2016
Watch the video, review the link, and read the material below to complete the questions.
March 16, 2008
(CBS)
Chances are you probably know someone who has died, or nearly died, because of medical
mistakes in a hospital. It’s much more common than most people realize, and if it can happen to the
children of a movie star, at one of the finest hospitals in the country, it can happen to anyone. Dennis
Quaid has starred in more than 50 films, but nothing prepared him for the drama and the near tragedy that
unfolded last November at Cedars-Sinai hospital in Los Angeles, when his infant twins were given
massive overdoses of a blood thinner that nearly killed them….The nurses had discovered that both twins
were in serious danger. They were supposed to have been given a pediatric blood thinner called Hep-lock
to flush out their IV lines and prevent blood clots. But instead, they had been given two doses of Heparin,
the adult version of the drug, which is 1,000 times stronger.
“We all have this inherent thing that we trust doctors and nurses, that they know what they’re doing. But
this mistake occurred right under our noses, that the nurse didn’t bother to look at the dosage on the
bottle,” Dennis Quaid tells Kroft. “It was ten units that our kids are supposed to get. They got 10,000. And
what it did is, it basically turned their blood to the consistency of water, where they had a complete
inability to clot. And they were basically bleeding out at that point.”
“There was blood oozing out of little blood draws on their feet, and things like that, you know, through
band-aids,” he adds. Quaid says that’s what first alerted the nurse that there was a problem. But the
hospital never called the Quaids and they didn’t find out that anything was wrong until the next day when
they showed up at the hospital early the next morning and went to the twins’ room. “We were met at the
door by our pediatrician, the nurse - head nurse that was on duty,” Dennis Quaid recalls. “Risk
management,” his wife adds. “Risk management, which is basically the liability division of a hospital,
which is lawyers,” he explains…. “They weren’t just given one massive overdose, they were given two
massive overdoses?” Kroft asks. “Two massive overdoses, a thousand times what they should have over
an eight-hour period that we know of,” Quaid says.
And to make matters worse the same avoidable mistake had occurred a year earlier at Methodist Hospital
in Indianapolis. Six infants were given multiple adult doses of Heparin instead of the pediatric version;
three of the infants survived, three did not. Asked when he found out about the Indianapolis incident,
Quaid says, “In the morning when I had gone in, a pediatrician told me about it.” “He said, ‘This has
happened before’?” Kroft asks.
“Yeah. He had told me about that three babies died. And it sent a chill down my spine,” Quaid
remembers.
The Quaids say the crisis went on for 41 hours, as doctors and nurses administered an antidote to Heparin,
which helps the blood coagulate. Slowly the twins began to stabilize, and after 12 long days in the
hospital, they were allowed to come home.…
But the experiences changed Dennis Quaid. He’s spent much of the past four months trying to dissect
what happened and figuring out ways to draw attention to what is one of the leading causes of death in
America—preventable human, medical error.
“These mistakes that occurred to us are not unique. And they’re not unique even to Cedars. They happen
in every hospital, in every state in this country. And 100,000 people, that I’ve come to find out, there’s
100,000 people a year are killed every year in hospitals by a medical mistakes,” he says.
Because the deaths occur one at a time, all over the country over an extended time period, Quaid says the
issue has slipped under the public’s radar. “It’s bigger than AIDS. It’s bigger than breast cancer. It’s bigger
than automobile accidents. And, yet, no one seems to be really be aware of the problem,” he says.
The causes range from misdiagnosis to surgical errors to medication mistakes like the accidental Heparin
overdose that that nearly killed the Quaid twins, an occurrence that’s not all that unusual, according to
Diane Cousins. She’s the vice president of U.S. Pharmacopeia, a non-profit public health group that
maintains one of the largest databases on medication errors.
“What we see with Heparin is that it is almost always in the list of top ten drugs that are reported for
medication errors, and almost always in the top ten that are harmful,” Cousins tells Kroft.
“What is it about Heparin that there’s so many mistakes?” Kroft asks.
“Well, Heparin is very commonly used in the hospital. And the number of opportunities for error are very
high,” she explains.
But Cousins says another contributing factor with Heparin is labeling that can easily lead to mistakes. The
10-unit pediatric dose and the 10,000-unit adult dose come in vials of identical size and shape and in
different shades of blue that can easily be confused, if not seen in reference to each other. And they are
not the only drugs with that problem.
Asked to give some examples, Cousins, showing two medications, tells Kroft, “In this case, we have a
solution of Lidocaine, which is an anesthetic often used to swab a child’s throat or mouth for mouth pain.
Here, you have lithium oral solution used for manic depression.”
“Lithium is not something you’d wanna give a child. Absolutely not,” she says.
The two small vials Cousins used as an example both have blue caps and cluttered labels, but one
contains a hormone and the other a children’s antibiotic.
“If you’re at arms’ length, it’s hard enough to read these labels because of their type size,” Cousins says.
“And I’d need my reading glasses,” Kroft remarks.
Baxter International, which manufactures the Heparin given to the Quaid twins, was fully aware that there
had been fatal mistakes that may have been caused by confusion over its labeling.
When the three infants in Indianapolis died after receiving an adult dose, Baxter issued a nationwide
safety alert and last October, began shipping Heparin with a redesigned, peel-off label to end the
confusion. What it didn’t do was recall the old stock that was sitting in hospitals all over the country,
including Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles.
“And as a result, our kids were given an old stock which was basically the same packaging and form that
the kids in Indiana had gotten. Now, they recall toasters. They recall trucks. They recall dog food that
came from China last year. But they don’t recall medicine that kills people if you give it in the wrong
dosage,” Dennis Quaid tells Kroft.
The Quaids believe that Baxter was the first link in a series of events that led to the overdosing of their
infants and they’re suing the company for negligence on behalf of their children.
Debra Bello, a senior director at Baxter, says there was nothing wrong with their product, and it wasn’t
their fault. “One of the most important components of medication administration is to read the label, and
not rely on color, shape or size,” she says.
“You sent out this warning which mentions not to rely on the color but to read the label…and you
redesigned it,” Kroft remarks. “When you designed this new vial, why didn’t you recall the old ones?”
“The, these vials are given over 100,000 times each day, safely, effectively. But nothing replaces reading
that drug before you administer it,” Bello says.
Asked if the company didn’t think it was necessary to recall those drugs, Bello says, “No, because the
product was safe and effective and the errors, as the hospital was acknowledged, were preventable and
due to failures in their system.”
That’s not in dispute. A California Department of Health Services investigation found that there had been
at least three critical systems failures at Cedars-Sinai hospital, in which pharmacy technicians and nurses
neglected to check the drugs they were distributing and administering. Thomas Priselac, the president and
CEO of Cedars-Sinai, didn’t dispute the findings.
“This was a preventable error. It was the result of human error,” Priselac says.
“You’re talking about a situation here where you had three different people make a mistake,” Kroft points
out.
“Yes,” Priselac acknowledges.
“What coulda been a fatal mistake. You got the people who put the wrong drug in the drawer. You got the
people who picked it up and brought it to the floor. And you got the nurses that looked at it—or didn’t
look at it—and put it in the IV line. Three people,” Kroft says.
Any time an error occurs, almost by definition, the unusual or the unexpected is what’s occurred. And
certainly in this particular case, that’s what occurred,” Priselac says. “We have to make sure we have
backup systems that pick up things when human error may occur to prevent that error from manifesting
itself.”
“But you had backup systems. You had three people,” Kroft remarks.
“Right,” Priselac replies.
“You haven’t sued the hospital even though they’re - all sorts of reports have been done and the hospital
has acknowledged serious mistakes,” Kroft asks Dennis Quaid.
“I’d like to see Cedar Sinai take the lead in doing something to change what’s going on in what I consider
to, in the end, a broken healthcare system in patient medical care,” the actor says.
Quaid calls it a conspiracy of silence, where doctors protect nurses, nurses protect hospitals, insurance
companies protect drug manufacturers. Almost no one, he says, is aggressively trying to find ways to
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eliminate medical mistakes. So the Quaids are in the final stages of launching a foundation they hope will
help remedy a situation that almost destroyed their lives.
“You’re lucky,” Kroft remarks.
“Yeah. Extremely lucky. And not a day goes by since then that I don’t think a day this one’s changed for
me, is that I don’t take a day for granted anymore ‘cause if they hadn’t made it, there never woulda been
another happy day, really,” he says.
Since the Quaid incident, Baxter International has voluntarily recalled all supplies of Heparin from the
market. It had nothing to do with the Quaids, but with possible contamination at a Chinese manufacturing
facility that may have contributed to at least 19 deaths.
Answer the questions below.
1.
Discuss the adverse patient occurrences which took place
.
The twins were supposed to be administered a routine anticoagulant called hep-lock for a staph
infection that both babies developed immediately after birth. This required nursing staff to set up an
IV and administer antibiotics along with the hep-lock to prevent blood clotting.
The nurses
administered at least two doses of heparin, an anticoagulant that is 1,000 stronger than hep-lock.
The
truth about the mistake had been concealed from the twin’s parents for at least eight hours if not
longer. The massive overdose meant that the babies did not have their natural immunity to clot blood
and even the slightest opening in their body caused blood to spurt out and on one occasion blood
spurted from one of the baby twin’s umbilical cords literally across the room onto the wall. The
parent which was actor Dennis Quaid, did further homework and was amazed to find out that Baxter,
the pharmaceutical manufacturer, knew that heparin and hep-lock medications were labeled similarly
in appearance and blue color on the vials, and that a rushed nurse or medical staffer could easily have
mixed them up.
2.
What preventive measures should have been taken to prevent the adverse patient occurrences
?
The old outdated bottles should have been discarded once the new ones were received and the
problem had been made public in regards to the 1st infants that were injured and died because of the
original bottles. The nurses also should have taken more time and slowed down to read the labels
thoroughly to make sure they were administering the correct vials and dosages to the twins. And, the
bottles that do look similar in shape and color should not be placed in close proximity to each other so
they do not get confused with each other.
3.
How can steps be taken to prevent these errors in the future
?
1) Encourage patients to take a more active role in their own healthcare, to understand more about
their medications and to take more responsibility for monitoring those medications.
2) Providers should take steps to educate, consult with, and listen to their patients.
3) Doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other providers should communicate more with patients at every
step of the way and make that communication a two way street, listening to the patients as well as
talking to them.
4) Doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other providers should inform their patients fully about the risks,
contraindications, and possible side effects of the medications they are taking and what to do if they
experience a side effect. They should also be more forthcoming when medication errors have
occurred and explain what the consequences have been.
5) The use of computerized information technologies in the prescribing and dispensing of medications
should be increased. Tying electronic prescriptions into the databases could automatically generate
warnings about improper prescribing for individual patients.
4.
What is the role of the quality improvement program in error prevention
?
To make sure healthcare is safe, effective, patient centered, timely, efficient, and equitable. To
conduct quality related activities. Avoiding injuries to patients from care that is intended to help them.
Providing services based on scientific knowledge to all who could benefit, and refraining from
providing services to those unlikely to benefit. Providing care that is respectful of and responsive to
individual patient preferences, needs, and values and ensuring that patient values guide clinical
decisions. Reducing waits and sometimes harmful delays for both those who receive and give care.
Avoiding waste, such as waste of equipment, supplies, ideas, and energy. Providing care that does not
differ in quality because of personal characteristics such as gender, ethnicity, geographic location, and
socioeconomic status.