Fatal Drug Mix-Up Exposes Hospital Flaws

IntenseOperator

DeweyOxburger
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Sep 16, 2003
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By TOM DAVIES, AP

INDIANAPOLIS (Sept. 23) - Early last Saturday, nurses at an Indianapolis hospital went to the drug cabinet in the newborn intensive care unit to get blood-thinner for several premature babies.

The nurses didn't realize a pharmacy technician had mistakenly stocked the cabinet with vials containing a dose 1,000 times stronger than what the babies were supposed to receive. And they apparently didn't notice that the label said "heparin," not "hep-lock," and that it was dark blue instead of baby blue.

Those mistakes led to the deaths of three infants. Three others also suffered overdoses but survived.

Now, their families, hospital officials and prosecutors are asking the same question: How could this happen?

Experts say last weekend's overdoses at Methodist Hospital illustrate that, despite national efforts to reduce drug errors, the system is still fragile and too often subject to human error.

"I see what happened here as depressingly normal," said Dr. Albert Wu of Johns Hopkins University, co-author of an Institute of Medicine report that estimated more than 1.5 million Americans a year are injured from medication errors in hospitals and nursing homes and as outpatients.

Methodist Hospital officials said they had safeguards in place before Saturday's overdoses.

Hep-lock - a lesser dosage of heparin that is routinely used to keep intravenous lines open in premature babies - arrives at the hospital in premeasured vials and is placed in a computerized drug cabinet by pharmacy technicians.

Nurses must enter their employee code and the patient's code into the cabinet's computer to open it. A drawer containing a large variety of medicines then opens, and they select the prescribed drugs from compartments and enter the amount withdrawn.

The system locks immediately afterward to prevent multiple withdrawals for the same patient. But there is no automated system to prevent nurses from taking the wrong medicine from the drawer in the first place.

According to hospital officials' account, a pharmacy technician had loaded the cabinet with heparin, at 10,000 units per milliliter, instead of hep-lock, at 10 units per milliliter.

D'myia Alexander Nelson and Emmery Miller died within hours of receiving the heparin. A little girl named Thursday Dawn Jeffers died late Tuesday. No autopsies were performed, but hospital officials said the cause of death was probably internal bleeding.

Even before the overdoses, the babies faced challenges.

D'myia and Emmery both weighed about a pound and were born more than three months early, barely past the point where survival is possible. Thursday Dawn was three weeks premature and, by comparison, a robust 4 pounds, 6 ounces.

D'myia's grandmother Lena Nelson said the little girl had gained weight in her first four days, then died several hours after she was given the blood-thinner overdose.

"She was doing fantastic. I could see her growing right in front of my eyes," Nelson said. "Then she was taken from us."

Hospital officials adopted new safeguards to prevent a recurrence. Among them are procedures requiring a minimum of two nurses to verify any dose of blood thinner in the newborn and pediatric critical care units. Another system, using bar codes to track medications, was being developed before the overdoses and is still in the works.

Since 2004, the Food and Drug Administration has required that drug makers place supermarket-style bar codes on their drugs. Many hospitals have installed bar-code scanners to make sure medication matches the recipient and is given at the right time. But money is an issue for many - the technology can cost millions.

Marion County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi said his office will investigate the deaths, but he is not assuming a crime occurred. The county coroner also is reviewing the case.

Methodist president and chief executive Sam Odle said the hospital planned no disciplinary action against those involved. "Whenever something like this happens, it is not an individual responsibility, it's an institutional responsibility," he said.

The five nurses and pharmacy technician involved are on leave and receiving support and counseling, and are expected to return to work, Odle said.

Nathaniel Lee, an attorney for the Jeffers and Miller families, said the drugs' maker needs to change how it labels heparin and hep-lock. Methodist has acknowledged two other heparin mix-ups involving babies in 2001, and said both infants recovered.

"If this was an isolated incident I would say that it would be solely the responsibility of the person at the hospital," Lee said. "But this is not an isolated incident."

Erin Gardiner, a spokeswoman for Deerfield, Ill.-based Baxter International, said the two drugs had different cap and label colors, bar codes and printing.

Wu, with Johns Hopkins, said the oversight was understandable, given that nurses were accustomed to having only the hep-lock vials stocked.

"If someone suddenly were to switch in your home where something was located, rearrange where your furniture was located, it would be really easy for you to trip and fall," he said.

The surviving babies face no remaining danger from the overdoses, Methodist spokesman Jon Mills said.

That is little consolation to Thursday Dawn's mother, Heather Jeffers, who blames the nurses, not drug labeling, for her daughter's death.

"I don't think it was from the label," she said. "They are both blue, but one is lighter than the other. How could they mistake those?"
 

SixFive

bonswa
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Mar 12, 2001
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My cousin who is a nurse in Louisville told me about this last week. I don't understand how this happened either. Must have been some dumb-assed nurses is all I can say!!

Heparin is usually supplied at 10,000 units per ml and it's a MEDICATION. It usually is supplied in a 1 ml single use vial. A heparin flush solution is 10 units/ml, and is usually supplied in a 10 ml multidose vial, and it is not considered a medicine. It comes in a bulk supply.

I'm really kind of suprised that these nurses were even trying to use a heparin flush solution. Flushing peripheral IVs with a low weight heparin solution is rarely done now (we never do it at our hospital), and even flushing PICCs (peripherally inserted central catheters) with heparin is not standard practice like it used to be.

I don't understand how this mistake would be made, stocking error or not. Stuff gets stocked wrong all the time. You always have to look at the label!! :shrug: I feel horrible for those parents, and really, that's such a devastating error to make, that I doubt those nurses ever practice again.
 

Mjolnir

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i would be concerned that the infants who lived would have some lasting effects. how tragic. i'm usually not litigous, but if it was my child, i would find the sharpest lawyer and sue them for everything. god bless them.
 

Terryray

Say Parlay
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Dec 6, 2001
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Medical errors are a scandal in this country

Medical errors are a scandal in this country

Many other countries do a better job. Most physician's organizations in US refuse to address it adequately.

I met a fellow who was a error/risk management specialist. He was an engineer who worked on systems approaches to reduce mistakes in many industries.
A big client was Wal-Mart, and aviation industry. He said the medical field is full of error-prone tendencies that would not be tolerated in any Wal-Mart wherehouse.

Anaesthesiology is the only medical disciple that has extensively utilized such outside experts with their modern error management techniques. Despite achieving spectacular results in reduction of mistakes, the other medical disciplines continue with typical arrogance that they are the best experts to solve this problem, and the high error rate (here invoving human lives, not overstocking of Frito Lay Extra Spicy BBQ Potato Chips), continues.
 

IntenseOperator

DeweyOxburger
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My gf is a nurse working in a surgical center (feets) and a local hospital. The mistakes are too numerous to mention. The pain they cause is horrible. I did get into a discussion with her on how most if not all of these mistakes could be corrected. If it was Frito Lay running the show (I worked for them for a stretch), none of this stuff would continue. It would be WAY TOO COSTLY for any normal company to run their daily affairs the way our big hospital conglomerates in the bigger cities do. The government won't fight those monster lobbies fighting for the medical businesses. I don't know about anywhere else, but here nurses are worked very hard (except at Cook County Hospital, union) and anybody is going to slip up between something that is light blue and or dark blue somewhere along the way. There are some safety measures here and their, but it's up to the character of the people that are handling things whether or not the extra safety steps are taken. We have a group of "nuns" or "sisters" running one of the local "non-profit":mj07: massive hospital chains and they are all about the $$. Not at all interested in providing medical services. Of course, you will get EVERY TEST possible if the insurance is top notch.

Back another time with more opining (as our fearless leader would say)
 
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