Celebrity Justice
Dennis Quaid Sues Drug Company

Actor Dennis Quaid and wife Kimberly Buffington have filed suit against Baxter Healthcare Corp., the makers of the drug Heparin.
Click to read the lawsuit!
The couple's newborn twins Zoe Grace and Thomas Boone were mistakenly given a massive overdose of the anti-coagulant drug last month while hospitalized at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in L.A. The Quaid's attorney says the twins "were very critical for a while," but appear to have recovered and "everything looks good." They filed suit because they want to prevent this from happening to any other children, Loggans said. The suit claims the Baxter is liable and negligent because the packaging of the 10 unit vial of Heparin looks almost exactly as the 10,000-units-per-milliliter vial of the drug.

Three children died in Indiana from a similar mix-up with the drug.

We're told that the Quaids have not sued Cedars ... yet. Just yesterday, Baxter issued a news release outlining the company's new "drug safety initiative" that promises to change the labeling of Heparin vials.

Cedars-Sinai released the following statement:

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center today announced a series of changes it has made in its medication policies and protocols since November 19, as well as immediate additional training of all nursing and pharmacy staff, as the medical center completed its preliminary investigation into a November 18 medication error involving three patients who erroneously received the wrong concentration of heparin (a medication used to prevent blood clotting) to flush their IV catheters.

The medical center's investigation found that preventable errors made by pharmacy and nursing staff caused the wrong concentration of heparin to be used.

A pharmacy technician failed to follow hospital policy of having another pharmacy technician verify the medication and concentration prior to removing it from main pharmacy inventory. As a result, the technician mistakenly retrieved a higher concentration of heparin (10,000 units per milliliter) instead of the lower-concentration heparin (10 units per milliliter) used for flushing IV catheters.

The higher concentration heparin was delivered to the satellite pharmacy that serves the pediatrics unit. A second pharmacy technician, working in the satellite pharmacy, did not verify the concentration of the delivery from the main pharmacy, as required by hospital policy.

As a result, the higher-concentration heparin was placed in a location in the pediatrics unit where the lower-concentration heparin is kept. The nurses who subsequently administered the heparin to the patients also did not follow hospital policy of verifying the correct medication and dose prior to flushing the intravenous site.

The error was identified later that day by Cedars-Sinai staff, who immediately performed blood tests on the patients to measure blood clotting function. In one of the three patients, the clotting tests returned quickly to normal. The other two patients were given protamine sulfate, a drug that reverses the effects of heparin and helps restore blood clotting function to normal. Additional medical tests and clinical evaluation conducted on the two patients found no adverse effects from the heparin or from the temporary abnormal clotting function.

"Although this was a rare event, and attributable to human error, it is also an important opportunity for the entire institution to explore any and all ways we can further improve medication safety," said Michael L. Langberg, M.D., chief medical officer at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

"On behalf of the medical center, I extend my deepest apologies to the families who were affected by this situation, and we will continue to work with them on any concerns or questions they may have. This was a preventable error, involving a failure to follow our standard policies and procedures, and there is no excuse for that to occur at Cedars-Sinai," Langberg said.

"Cedars-Sinai's reputation as a quality and safety leader nationally is due in large part to an organizational culture of continually improving our systems to minimize any chance of human error. Immediately following this incident we began additional focused education on medication safety to augment our regular training, and have implemented additional procedures and protocols for our pharmacy and nursing staff," Langberg said.

Among the actions Cedars-Sinai has taken in response to the incident:


► High-concentration heparin (10,000 units per milliliter) has been further sequestered in all pharmacies.

► Only saline will be used for peripheral IV catheter flush on all pediatric patient-care units. (It was already the practice on adult patient-care units to use only saline for peripheral IV catheter flush.)

► In addition to the existing policy of having designated high-alert medications (such as heparin) checked by two pharmacy staff prior to the medications leaving the main pharmacy, and then checked again by pharmacy staff in the satellite pharmacy, a new step requires a second check by pharmacy staff in the satellite pharmacy before they place high-alert medications in stock on a patient-care unit.

► In addition to these checks on designated high-alert medications by pharmacy staff, nurses will continue the existing policy of separately verifying medication and dose prior to giving high-alert medications to the patient.

► The existing ongoing training for pharmacy and nursing staff on medication safety policies and protocols has been augmented with immediate focused education on high-alert medications, begun Nov. 20, to reinforce the hospital's high-alert medication safety policies and protocols:

Starting on the evening shift of November 20:

● All nurses (approximately 1800) were re-trained on high-alert medication policies and practices, and were required to pass a written test on the material before they could resume caring for any patients.

● All pharmacy staff (approximately 200) were re-trained on high-alert medication policies and practices.

► The individuals involved in this incident were immediately relieved of duty pending investigation, and appropriate disciplinary actions are being taken.

Langberg said that Cedars-Sinai is also continuing to cooperate with regulatory agencies investigating the incident, and that Cedars-Sinai would make additional changes in policies and protocols if indicated by the regulatory agencies or any additional findings by Cedars-Sinai.

Reader Comments

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46. Dennis should sue the hospital for having a dumb nurse administering the wrong dosage to the twins. His lawyer probably did recommend him to sue the drug company though because there is probably more money there to get but the nurse should be fired and the hospital shoud be sued. The drugs that are similar looking as far as colors and dosage should not be sitting right next to each other on the shelfs either. I know people make mistakes but when youre dealing with healthpractices for a living don't you think that there should be extra precautionary steps so that stupid, careless mistakes like this that could have killed those poor babies don't happen! It makes me think twice about going to the doctors or hospital??? Can you really trust them.

Posted at 4:21PM on Dec 4th 2007 by heather

47. Those who say the bottles need to be in different colors are stupid. How many different medications are made by a company, with variations of dosage? And how many drug companies are there? So you end up with 300 different colored bottles? That makes it even more dangerous if nurses were to recognize drugs by color... what's to say someone won't mistaken a red bottle for maroon?

Those who say how hard is it to put "DO NOT GIVE TO BABIES" on the label are also stupid. Because if you do that, then you'll also have to put on the label "DO NOT GIVE TO PEOPLE WHO ARE ALLERGIC TO HEPARIN", then "DO NOT GIVE TO PEOPLE WHO ARE USING A CONFLICTING MEDICATION", and "DO NOT GIVE TO PEOPLE WHO HAVE ALREADY BEEN GIVEN THIS MEDICATION". Where will it end?

Posted at 4:21PM on Dec 4th 2007 by AznLA

48. Maybe we should go to universal healthcare. I'm sure the rest of the world doesn't make stupid mistakes like this! YEAH, RIGHT! We've got the best healthcare in the world.

Posted at 4:14PM on Dec 4th 2007 by Whatever

49. #31, the drug, Heparin, can be used wtih infants at the CORRECT DOSE. A nurse or an assistant can't read or doesn't understand the correct dosage. Quaid can sue the drug company, but the fault is with the hospital.

The news said that other patients (both adult and children) were given bad doses, so that's a nurse problem. Alot of these nurse and medical technicians can hardly read or understand the drugs they give. That's the real problem. Medical errors is a major problem in our country.

Posted at 4:39PM on Dec 4th 2007 by stephanie

50. If the Doctor's orders were correct, Then its the nurse's fault.
She was the one that gave the wrong dose. NOT THE DRUG COMPANY.
Anyways when you give medication you are to being doing your "7s" (which is 7 Identifiers before giving the medication to a patient) ........ The Nurse is at fault.

Posted at 10:11AM on Dec 5th 2007 by Shelley

51. ...for the record....I posted forever abt this and so did every nurse who blogs on TMZ.....and it seems to be the same conversation again....BOTTOMLINE ....if u have a loved one in the hspt....u need to advocate for them and let the nurses know u will be questioning....these MISTAKES happen ALL the time !!!!!......on so many levels once u enter the hspt system, right down to the people who clean ur room, procedures get skipped everyday!!!!! and the patient suffers.....most of the time the patient never realizes procedures have failed them and the cause for new onset symtoms is never acknowledged.

Posted at 4:17PM on Dec 4th 2007 by jr

52. I think the both parties are at fault, first the drug company because this needs to stop, the drug company has known that this was happening and yet they did nothing to prevent it.the hospitals was aware and just issue a memo, but did all the employees read the memo? He is using his celeb status to make the world aware. I belive there needs to be more of a control of the drugs at the hospitial, my daughter was in the NICU for two weeks, it was hard enough to see her there let alone to have something like this happen, those babies are already fighting for their life.

Posted at 4:26PM on Dec 4th 2007 by NICUMOM

53. Why is he suing the drug company and not the hosptial or the nurse who administered it? It is the nurse's job to know the difference in labels. The nurse and hospital who trained her are at fault! Besides he doesn't need the money, does he?

Posted at 4:20PM on Dec 4th 2007 by mel

54. The nurse that overdosed his kids was probably black.

Posted at 4:19PM on Dec 4th 2007 by John

55. This is not the fault of the drug manufacturer. It is the nurse's responsibility to ensure that he/she is giving the correct medication to the right patient, at the proper time and in the prescribed amount. The 5 rights of medication administration is one of the first things taught in nursing school. Had this procedure been followed, none of this would have happened. As an RN, it is our primary duty to do no harm to patients in our care. This mistake lies solely with the nurse.

Posted at 4:45PM on Dec 4th 2007 by nurseinVA

56. You People Aren't Very Bright, you're so stupid! The packaging/labeling is fine! You'd have to be a total dumbass not to be able to tell!

Posted at 4:28PM on Dec 4th 2007 by Dumbass

57. HOW MANY BOTTLES HAVE BEEN USED IN THREE YEARS PLUS, 3 out of 100000????
SEEMS LIKE HOSPITAL FAULT,. DO NOT EVER GET IV IN SIDE OF WRIST CAN CAUSE LOOSE OF FELLING IN HAND AND WEAKNESS. BECAUSE OF THE NERVE AT WRIST/

Posted at 4:30PM on Dec 4th 2007 by POCKETA

58. To poster #49, I'm not sure everyone here is an idiot. I agree with you that Quaid is likely to donate any financial gain, he's known to be a pretty level-headed, good guy and I agree that bringing attention by suing the drug company is likely the Quaid's true goal here. Altruistic as that may seem on the surface, who in reality ends up paying for this kind of litigation? In reality it is the ordinary citizen by way of higher Rx prices, declined insurance coverage and so on. Suing pharmaceutical companies and big money institutions most often only benefits lawyers, even class action suits rarely result in actualy measurable money to victims. So as altruistic as connecting packaging to the human error in this case or any other might seem and suing accordingly based on that connection, it is still an avoidance of the actual medication error and who actually administered that wrong dose. It certainly does not make people here on this blog all idiots.

Posted at 4:31PM on Dec 4th 2007 by JCinAZ

59. All black nurses incompetent. At least they were every time I was in the hospital. I couldn't wait for the white nurses shift.

Posted at 4:32PM on Dec 4th 2007 by LarryBirkhead

60. I'm sure if this was an isolated incident, the hospital/staff would
be getting sued. However, this is a nation (actually worldwide)
occurrence and leaving some dead. What do you suppose we do, sue every
hospital and lay off every nurse that administered the drug??? Then you
would be saying how stupid that sounds. Hospitals are understaffed and
the staff is overworked, so lets make things a little easier so
mistakes like this do not happen worldwide.

For all those posting that act like know it alls (just because you work in the field and obviously have never made a mistake, lol), maybe if nurses had
to go through a little bit more schooling mistakes like this would not
happen. I don't think we should have RN's (anyone can get an
Associate's degree and pass a test) , but we should have only NP's or
at least the education equivalent to that.

Posted at 4:32PM on Dec 4th 2007 by lissabell

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