Quaid Medical Screwup -- How It Happened

Sources tell TMZ that a pharmacy technician at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center mistakenly stocked a massive dose of a drug that ended up being given to Dennis Quaid's newborn twins.

Thomas Boone and Zoe Grace are in stable condition. But a well-placed source at Cedars tells us they are "still very concerned because of the bleed out," adding they won't know for another week if the mistake will cause "longterm effects."

Sources tell TMZ that pharmacy technicians stock the drug Heparin, used to prevent clots and flush out IVs. The drug comes in vials -- 10 units for babies, up to 10,000 units for adults. Protocol at the hospital is to keep the different units separated, but a technician accidentally put 10,000 units in the drawer where the 10 units were stored.

Last Sunday, both infants -- born November 8 by surrogate -- were each given two, 10,000-unit dosages. They began to bleed out just before midnight and were transferred to the neo-natal intensive care unit.

Cedars issued a statement last night, acknowledging the mistake and calling it a "preventable error." That's highly unusual. Also, the hospital claims seven patients were given the wrong dosages. Our sources say 13 patients got the wrong dosage.

Reader Comments

(Page 10 of 10) Previous 15 Comments

136. TO DENNIS, KIMBERLY AND THEIR BABIES: I FORGOT TELL YOU WHERE I´M FROM. I´M FROM VILLA DOLORES, PROVINCE OF CORDOBA, REPUBLICA ARGENTINA AND SOME OF MY PUPILS SEND THE BEST WISHES FOR YOU AND THE BABIES. WE´RE IN A CYBER AND ONE OF THE GIRLS, CALLED CLEO SENDS YOU HER BEST WISHES. GOD BLESS YOU! ANA

Posted at 2:21PM on Nov 22nd 2007 by Ana del Carmen Agüero

137. Wow, someone RICH has experienced what us "middle class" have to put up with everyday. TOO bad it was infants, but what makes their children any more important than my own? Too bad some corporate execs and highly placed members of our gov't does not have to experience this.
This was caused due to the hospital using lower paid pharmacy techs instead of higher paid ( and trained) pharmacist to fill this drug bin. Why do they do this to make more $$$$$ at patients expense.

Posted at 2:40PM on Nov 22nd 2007 by Againstgreed

138. I worked as a pharmacy technician for over a year, and in our pharmacy everything had to be double checked by a pharmacist before it could even leave the pharmacy. Also, we were required to use a machine that verified to us (by the UPC on the patient label and on the bottle label) that we had the correct medication in hand. Technically, when it comes down to it, the pharmacist should have caught the mistake before it left. Bad mistake.

Posted at 7:04PM on Nov 22nd 2007 by Jessica

139. #106 you don't have time to stop and "make sure" you have the right patient, right dosage, right medicine, etc..

God help anyone under your care. You have no right to be a nurse. If you have not killed someone yet you will.

Posted at 5:39PM on Nov 22nd 2007 by you know

140. the fact of the matter is that many medications are identified by the color of the bottle and health care professionals learn and memorize that this color is this medicine and that color is that medicine, it's just how humans are wired-it does not excuse not verifying the medication is correct-but the lay person has no idea how hard it has become to provide QUALITY healthcare-if a med is identified by a light blue label and the manufacturer has another med with an almost identical label it is very easy to mistake the 2-trust me, it ain't easy anymore-(honestly, it sucks serious s@*#)-I love Dennis Quaid and I am SO SORRY that this has happened to him, but I feel for the healthcare staff at Cedars

Posted at 10:17PM on Nov 22nd 2007 by idahomom

141. Why were the babies back in the hospital? The picture with this article shows DQ with the babies outside? A shame I hope they recover 100% and whoever made this horrible mistake is cleaning bedpans.....

Posted at 11:52PM on Nov 22nd 2007 by Malibu Barbie

142. Is reading a requirement for these employees! Absolutely unacceptable. Anyone involved should be fired. So sad.

Posted at 9:19AM on Nov 23rd 2007 by thomas cooper

143. totally agree. I am a nurse, it comes down to the nurses unfortunately, alot of us have been there, it won't happen to them again. But the drug companies have done nothing to change the labeling either.(what I mean here is the color of the labels are very similar, if you look at a heparin bottle in person, the damn thing is half the size of my little finger). It is very true, there are several medications out there that have similar labels with the mix up being very deadly, Heparin is one, I can list about 5 others. We need to put pressure on the drug companies to change the labeling (ie color) and packaging. Just look how similar those heparin bottle look. TMZ you did a great job blowing the pictures up, but put them to scale with a ruler and really look how deadly it becomes.

As a nurse it is so disturbing this has happened again. And it repeatedly happens. WE NEED TO PRESSURE THE DRUG COMPANY!!!! MEMOS DON'T WORK

Posted at 10:02AM on Nov 24th 2007 by pam

144. number 70...... i guess you think that because you have been a nurse for a long time that you know everything. Not every nurse has the choice to work 8 or 12 hour shifts. second is you should know well that reporting things is not easy to do especially since you have been a nurse for a while or maybe you have never tried to report things that are not being done properly. I have a friend that got FIRED for reporting things that nurses were not supposed to be doing!!! and BTW stop being a know it all and acting like your perfect because the reality is that you have made a mistake as a nurse but i guess you are too proud to admitt it. But hey there has to be a reason that there are ten times more med errors out there than are being reported itscause people like you think they are too perfect and admitting a mistake would mean your not PERFECT!! i guess your med error didnt kill someone or cause serious damage or you would not be on that high horse.

Posted at 10:27PM on Nov 27th 2007 by Sheesshhh

145. Looks like the Pharmacy Technician is being blamed!!! Hmmm??? The technician did'nt inject an unknown substance into an infant's VEIN!!!

Scenario: If a bottle of tobasco sauce had been placed in the drawer by the Pharmacy Technician would the nurse still have drawn some up and infused a round for the infant patients??? I think Sooooooooooo!!!

Pull the nurse's license and at a minimum reprimand the entire pharmacy!!!

Posted at 10:53PM on Nov 26th 2007 by lew

146. to #69, Yes , every RN goes to a strike to make money. The point is, if hospital administrators would just listen to the nurses, strikes could be avoided. Nurses are scared at times with the staffing cuts and the increase in acuity of patients. Then mistakes like the Heparin incident happen. Again, if the hospitals added 1 RN to each floor and increased the pay by$2 to $3/hr, maybe they could retain RN's , and then maybe the RN's would care about the institution they work for. As it is, RN's are overwhelmed and mistakes happen.I work 12 hour shifts and I agree, after 8 hrs, my brain is not 100%. The fact that this medication error has occured more than once is disturbing.So many professionals have a hand in that order before it reaches the bedside. God Bless those babies and for that matter, God help anyone who enters a hospital in this day and age.

Posted at 3:54PM on Nov 27th 2007 by Bonnie Bergman

147. #69 sign your name and be a real RN

Posted at 4:03PM on Nov 27th 2007 by Bonnie Bergman

148. The nursing shortage is not real, it is hospital created. Their priorities are messed up, cutting back in the wrong areas. The CEO's of hospitals continue to make 6 digit income with heavty bonuses, yet the RN's, Techs, Pharmacists, ect continue to be cut back, in # of personnel and in pay increases. The RN doesn't even receive cost of living raises, the bonus for X-mas is a move ticket.
I FEEL TERRIBLE ABOUT THE TWINS, I SINCERELY HOPE THAT THEY HAVE NO RESIDUAL EFFECTS FROM THIS. IT SHOULDN'T HAVE AND WOULDN'T HAVE OCCURED IF HOSPITALS PUT THEIR MONEY IN THE RIGHT PLACE, AGAIN THE CEOS OF THESE INSTITUTIONS MAKE A TREMENDOUS AMOUNT OF MONEY AND YET THE QUALITY OF HEALTH CARE CONTINUES TO DECLINE, IE THE TWINS.

Posted at 4:59PM on Nov 27th 2007 by Hobie

149. who cares about old man Quaide, I do wish those babies well though, I don't believe in surragacy, thats baby buying and only for the rich!!!

Posted at 4:07PM on Dec 5th 2007 by JoJo

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