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I ran across this in a medical blog, scary and it could have been anywere, sad, and everybody loses here.
Coral Springs mother died from massive overdose given by Broward General nurse
Copyright © 2007, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/features/health/sfl-rxod24jan24,0,4783352,print.story?coll=sfla-travel-print
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The chief executive of the North Broward Hospital District, a tax-assisted body that owns Broward General, said the nurse and hospital staff were crushed by the fatal medication error and adopted new practices to prevent similar mistakes.
Gosh a drug error killing a patient ? *SHOCK*. Similar mistakes have been made 100s/1000s of times - they did the policy review to look good.
Plass was taking the anti-anxiety drug Klonopin, but had no health coverage and did not get more when her pills ran out, an autopsy report and state records show. Stopping Klonopin can cause seizures, the health department said.
Another killed by no insurance ?
The correct dose required 3.2 vials of the drug. Cooper gave Plass 32 vials, hospital administrator Joe Scott said. To get that many, she had to search the halls and take every vial from three computerized drug-dispensing machines, he said. "That would be a big red flag," Scott said.All the Dilantin didn't fit in one intravenous bag, so Cooper hooked up two, one in each arm, Scott said. "That would be another big red flag," he said.
All the Dilantin didn't fit in one intravenous bag, so Cooper hooked up two, one in each arm, Scott said. "That would be another big red flag," he said.
Uh oh.
I think the real question is... did the 800mg of dilatin (likely written on paper) look like 8000 and thus it was a problem with the handwriting ? (probably not). Sounds like the nurse misinterpreted 800 as 8000. I guess if the nurse knew that 8000mg was 2.5x the lethal limit she might not have given it. It certainly doesn't take much of a computer program to display typical doses of a drug to a nurse that is about to administer a drug.
How exactly do you put 32 vials in an IV bag anyway ?
email:
That's a horrible story. On the opposite end of the spectrum, I got a call on the phone an hour after taking a routine blood test. It seems my blood glucose level was 50, and the doctor called to make sure I was OK.
You can't fake good medical care. Even a child can tell the difference.
I'll bet those drug dispensing machines are mainly to prevent the nurses from stealing the drugs, not to help them use them more safely.
An order-taker at Burger King has a better computer system than most nurses do, and that's exactly what I am here to help change. If I have any "agenda", it is to help doctors catch up to waiters and auto mechanics in their beneficial use of computers.
Never once have I ordered chicken but received fish.
Never once has anyone tried to install a Ford part in my Chevy.
But once, I did receive the wrong drug from the pharmacy.
Robert Gleeman, Medical Journalist for EMR Update.com Email: robert@emrupdate.com Tel: 1-650-968-6359 Skype and ooVoo user name: robertgleeman EMR progress is a matter of fact. EMR Update supports your right to know.
Robert Gleeman:Never once have I ordered chicken but received fish.Never once has anyone tried to install a Ford part in my Chevy.But once, I did receive the wrong drug from the pharmacy.
The complexity of running a fully-stocked, modern pharmacy can't be compared with ordering a sandwich from Burger King or bringing your car in for a tune-up. I'm sure you know that, but your examples are not legitimate for comparison purposes.
But your point (I think) is taken: the opportunity for human error in the dispensing of medicine is still at unacceptably high levels.
There is one thing an EMR would not have helped in this case.
Dilantin is NOT the treatment for withdrawal seizures!
Scott
As a follow up to this story. This customer is a prime site user for a leading EMR and my Mother was just there. They have all of the best in technology, so obviously technology is not the answer to patient care.
Brendon
sweaner:There is one thing an EMR would not have helped in this case.Dilantin is NOT the treatment for withdrawal seizures!Scott
:) a classic post !
Brendon:As a follow up to this story. This customer is a prime site user for a leading EMR and my Mother was just there. They have all of the best in technology, so obviously technology is not OFTEN the answer to BETTER patient care.Brendon
As a follow up to this story. This customer is a prime site user for a leading EMR and my Mother was just there. They have all of the best in technology, so obviously technology is not OFTEN the answer to BETTER patient care.
Computers don't make nurses smarter.