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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61. think they should both be sued, 50-50. The hospital should be sued as a warning to all hospitals: that their staffs need to be up to par, AND that they have enough staff on hand.

The drug co. should be sued so that they will start thinking about putting different dosages of the same medication in different colored bottles. They should make color coding the standard across the line of all medications.

Medical and nursing schools could teach this color coding, just as electronic schools teach color coding for wiring and resistors.

Then all we would have to worry about is color blind doctors and nurses.

Posted at 4:34PM on Dec 4th 2007 by DIANE T

62. Looks exactly the same??? Why do the dummies think the neon-green cap is on one, and not the other?? Even if the retard nurse couldnt read, she should have been able to distinguish the difference.

The drug companies did nothing wrong, unless you are an idiot!!

If they are to sue anyone, sue the hospital for hiring the stupid-ass nurse.

So this wont happen again.... give me a break- they want money.

If you have idiots working in the hospitals, then this can happen again.

Posted at 4:36PM on Dec 4th 2007 by Jzz

63. When I was last in the hospital all white nurses checked on me in the middle of the night. Black nurses could've cared less if I died in my sleep.

Posted at 4:35PM on Dec 4th 2007 by LarryBirkhead

64. If the hospital is a State run facility, it is immune to being sued.
The hospital would fall under what is called soverign immunity.

That is probably why Quaids attorneys havent sued them. If Quaid sues the drug company, the hospital would be forced to Join In the suit because the drug company's attorneys will bring them in to show they were negligent. The only way the hospital will not be sued if it is ran by the State of California in some form or fashion.

Posted at 4:37PM on Dec 4th 2007 by Deep Pockets

65. I just don't understand the people who keep saying the bottles are the same. Because both are blue? Big difference in blues, the language is completely different and the CAPs are different (significantly.) A lay person might make the mistake by confusing the measurements but a professional shouldn't.

To those people who say this happens all the time - yep - it does and we need to fix it. We won't do that by holding the wrong party (the one with deep pockets) responsible. And having drug companies color code meds in order to get there is scary. What's next - animal shapes?

Posted at 4:40PM on Dec 4th 2007 by barbara

66. No, the hospital they went to are for the rich& famous.

Posted at 4:40PM on Dec 4th 2007 by Jzz

67. This same thing has happened to premature babies across the country many times before, for the same reasons, in different hospitals. Yes, it's human error in that the technician stocking the shelves and the nurse giving the drug both should have known better, but the drug company should have taken a look at their hand in it after the first time and tried to find better ways to reduce human error. If suing the drug company prevents this from happening again, then go for it. Sometimes going after the one with the deepest pockets creates the most changes.

Posted at 4:41PM on Dec 4th 2007 by Yay

68. To LISSABELL - wow, as one of the nurses posting here, I bet every one of us would tell you that you are absolutely right, nurses who claim they "never made a mistake" are the nurses everyone ought to avoid having as their caregivers. Everyone makes mistakes. I do not think any nurse posting here meant to imply perfection on any of our parts or that of our profession. But accountability is a key value of our profession not passing the buck or blame to label colors. If the nursing staff is not held accountable in this case and labelling is held to blame, it will actually insult the profession of nursing if you ask me.

Posted at 4:44PM on Dec 4th 2007 by JCinAZ

69. Any trained professional can tell the difference between 10 and 10,000, but the company will settle with them anyway due to the negative press. They need to sue the hospital and the person who administered the drugs.

Posted at 4:47PM on Dec 4th 2007 by Debra

70. Well if the hospital is not State affiliated, they will be brought into the suit.
Even if Dennis does not want to sue them directly, the drug company will bring them in to lessen the blow.


I am just glad that the babies are ok.

Posted at 4:47PM on Dec 4th 2007 by Deep Pockets

71. Dennis suing for the money. No doubt. He can't get a job in Hollywood.

Posted at 4:48PM on Dec 4th 2007 by LarryBirkhead

72. LOOK at the photo of those bottles. The can easily be mistaken

for each other. Quaid doesnt need the money. He is doing this to

force a change in bottles appearance. Some of you people who

post really sound dumb.

Posted at 11:08PM on Dec 4th 2007 by JT

73. For those of you who are not a parent or nurse, stop protecting the pharmaceutical companies who are playing a big game beyond our basic wellbeing and survival as humans on this planet.

These labels are similar enough and, obviously, there is historical data of multiple errors in the past for The Quaids to be suing the pharmaceutical company. These labels should be DISTINCTLY different from one another to assist in preventing errors for overextended and overworked nurses (12-hour plus days).

Feel great compassion for those of you who post so cruely of these parents of newborns who remain in serious physical condition! Please educate yourselves regarding karma....

Posted at 4:55PM on Dec 4th 2007 by Mary

74. I'm a nurse and this has been a problem for years. Yes, you should double check the dose with another nurse, but the reality is hospitals only care about the money, profits and not the patients. Try having 10-12 patients, all high risk and care, and try to do everything yourself because of cutbacks. Often another nurse is tied up with her own patients and unable to stop and help. The drug companies have multiple drugs just like this, and when you are stressed out and overworked, accidents do happen! At least because the Quaids have influence and money, maybe something will finally be done.

Posted at 12:56AM on Dec 6th 2007 by scottishlass

75. what part of 10 vs, 10,000 is hard to decipher? not to mention the different color caps!

Posted at 4:55PM on Dec 4th 2007 by de de de

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