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July 9, 2009

Infants and medication errors

pediatric medication errorsMedication errors happen. They can and do occur at every step of the way from calculating dosages to prescribing, dispensing and giving drugs not only to adults but to children. Take one of the more famous cases: Actor Dennis Quaid's newborn twins who somehow survived being given a blood-thinner at 1,000 times the proper dose.

A study published this week in the journal Pediatrics looked at medication errors specifically involving heart drugs dispensed to children. What they found was, er, heart-stopping. They found that in a single year, half of the errors made were in children under the age of 1 and 90 percent of those were in children younger than six months. The littlest seem to be most vulnerable because health care providers may miscalculate and give them more medication than someone of their weight can handle or they may prescribe a drug not meant for someone so young. ...

Johns Hopkins researchers, who led the study of data from 2003-2004, pointed out that 96 percent of the 821 errors never caused harm, but 4 percent did. No one was killed. But in one instance, the patient's weight in pounds was mistaken for weight in kilograms, resulting in an overdose of three different heart drugs, which sent the child into cardiac arrest, researchers said.

One thing that's missing from the study: A calculation of how often medication errors actually occur. Previous studies have estimated that 1.5 million people a year (adults and children) may be impacted.

These heart drugs are used more often in children than you might think. Four in 1,000 U.S babies are born with congenital heart disease. According to the study, most of the harmful errors involved diuretics, used to treat heart failure and lower blood pressure by ridding the body of excess water, and drugs for lowering blood pressure. Not only are these medications used in those infants but they are being given more often to older children and teens with high blood pressure.

"Medication errors are inevitable," the study says, "given the human factor in patient care."

But how can these errors be reduced? Double- and triple-checking doses, labels and safety warnings can be a start. Hospitals are encouraged to put any mechanisms in place that will reduce the chance that mistakes will happen.

Posted by Stephanie Desmon at 12:00 PM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Pediatrics
        

Comments

Johns Hopkins is a good place to study medical errors. Google "Adventures in Cardiology"

http://adventuresincardiology.com

This happened to my friends newborn yesterday. His child has had multiple problems and surgeries. It looked like they were going to get to leave the hospital this week, but after this error, who know. They are saying that the child may end up with mental problems as a result. They are doing a CAT scan today.

The doctor told him that some "people from the pharmacy" was coming to talk to him. My thoughts are that they are trying to get him to sign a waiver of liability. I told him not to sign (anything). He needs to talk to a lawyer.

If anyone has any helpful hints or has been through this, please email me at mikebell08@aol.com

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About Picture of Health
Kelly Brewington came to the health beat a year ago after covering everything from education and government to race and immigration in her 11 years as a reporter. Since then, she has tackled stories on autism, heart failure and acupuncture used to treat drug addiction. She’s been fascinated by medicine since childhood, when her doctor dad and nurse mom gave her Gray’s Anatomy coloring book to play with. She also blames her early exposure to the field of medicine for her hypochondria.

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