Aug. 24, 2008
Dennis Quaid Recounts Twins' Drug Ordeal
Actor Tells 60 Minutes' Steve Kroft Medical Errors Kill Thousands
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Play CBS Video Video The Wrong Medicine Dennis Quaid's newborn twins nearly died when they were mistakenly given a drug overdose. The actor and his wife share their story to draw attention to hospital mistakes that kill as many as 100,000 Americans a year. Steve Kroft reports.
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Dennis Quaid (CBS)
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Chances are you probably know someone who has died, or nearly died, because of medical mistakes in a hospital. It's much more common than most people realize, and if it can happen to the children of movie star, at one of the finest hospitals in the country, it can happen to anyone.
Dennis Quaid has starred in more than 50 films, but nothing prepared him for the drama and the near tragedy that unfolded last November at Cedars-Sinai hospital in Los Angeles, when his infant twins were given massive overdoses of a blood thinner that nearly killed them.
When 60 Minutes first broadcast this story in the spring, Quaid and his wife, Kimberly, had kept most of their thoughts and many of the details private. They decided then to talk about what happened, what caused it, and what needs to be done to keep it from happening to somebody else.
"It was the scariest, most frightening day that I think either of us have ever been through, to come face to face with your little kids who - so young in that kinda situation," Quaid tells correspondent Steve Kroft.
And few couples had tried harder to have kids than Dennis and Kimberly Quaid. They had suffered through five miscarriages, before finally turning to a surrogate to carry, what turned out to be twins, Thomas Boone and Zoe Grace, conceived with the Quaids' own sperm and eggs.
But within a few days of coming home, the twins showed signs of a having a staph infection and doctors recommended they be admitted to Cedars-Sinai hospital for routine treatment with intravenous antibiotics.Photos: Dennis Quaid
On their second day there, the Quaids were told that the babies were doing fine, so they went home to get a few hours of rest, leaving instructions to be called if there were any problems. But around 9 p.m. that night, Kimberly Quaid had a mother's premonition that something had gone wrong.
"I just had this horrible feeling come over me and I felt like that the babies were passing. And I just had this feeling of dread," she recalls.
"Kimberly even made a note at the time that she had the feeling, for some reason," Dennis Quaid adds. "And I called the room. And I was put through to the nurse who was in our room with the kids. And I said, 'How are the kids?' And she said, 'They're fine. They're just fine.'"
But Quaid says they weren't fine.
In fact, around the time of the call, the nurses had discovered that both twins were in serious danger. They were supposed to have been given a pediatric blood thinner called Hep-lock to flush out their IV lines and prevent blood clots. But instead, they had been given two doses of Heparin, the adult version of the drug, which is 1,000 times stronger.
"We all have this inherent thing that we trust doctors and nurses, that they know what they're doing. But this mistake occurred right under our noses, that the nurse didn't bother to look at the dosage on the bottle," Dennis Quaid tells Kroft. "It was ten units that our kids are supposed to get. They got 10,000. And what it did is, it basically turned their blood to the consistency of water, where they had a complete inability to clot. And they were basically bleeding out at that point."
"There was blood oozing out of little blood draws on their feet, and things like that, you know, through band-aids," he adds.
Quaid says that's what first alerted the nurse that there was a problem.
Produced by Ira Rosen
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See all 246 Commentstwins and hospital mistakes, that cost so many lives.
It is a real problem that is like the elephant no one
acknowleges and no one is accoutable for.
The medical community in my small town murdered my
son because he had a disability and they withheld
treatment that could have saved his life, and
chose not to. They are getting away with it because
I cannot find a lawyer who will take the case, first
they agree to take the case and then they say they
can''t and withdraw. Now the two years is up and they
got away with it. Rae a Reed 435 755 0915 I would like someone to do a story about how the most helpless people the disables are treated by the medical community.
in this country.
This is one of the most arrogant comments I have ever heard from a notoriously arrogant lot of people...actors. Of course, this is why you, 60 minutes, gave him center stage in the first place and let him make such a statement. Need I remind you that we are the ones in the trenches every day, working under circumatances you don''t ''get'' unless you do it. In spite of our best efforts, we make mistakes... because every move, every hurried calculation and decision can become one as in any other job, only ours can be fatal. We get that. We lose sleep over it. He gets to ''retake'' and ''remake'' his day at will. We are educated enough to know how easy it is to screw up. Yet, we are brave enough to get up and give it another day. Would he? To suggest we cover up for one another is disgusting to me. Shame on all of you. Walk in my shoes for the 15 years I have done it, work holiday''s weekends, days and nights then we''ll talk because only then will you be qualified to judge the likes of us.
Your viewers should know there is a way to solve and prevent medication errors through technology called barcode point-of-care (BPOC) medication safety solutions. These are wireless, hand-held devices which scan barcodes on medications and patient wristbands at bedside to make sure medications are given accurately. The devices can even check for allergy and drug interactions as well as documenting important information about whether pain medications are working.
Mr. Quaid was correct -- let%u2019s not wait for another fatal medication error to occur %u2013 consumers should be asking their hospitals before checking in if they have bar-code point-of-care medication safety technology as part of the criteria in determining which facility to get care from %u2013 just like picking your primary care physician %u2013 you need to investigate whether your hospital uses handheld, bar-code technology.
IntelliDOT Corporation
San Diego, California
*Medication Errors Observed in 36 Health Care Facilities by Kenneth N. Barker, PhD; Elizabeth A. Flynn, PhD; Gientte A. Pepper, PhD; David W. Bates, MD, MSc; Robert L. Mikeal, PhD.
I also believe that the medicine should have been recalled in addition to the nurses and rest of the staff being more careful.
I have worked in the quality and risk management arena of hospitals and have also been on the receiving end of having major surgeries six times in my life. Just prior to the last one, I asked them about the drugs they were getting ready to use during my surgery - I was deathly allergic to one that is commonly used for irrigation - she thanked me for asking as that drug was in the mix. That would have been an error on their part as it was written all over my records! I would not have hesitated to call JCAHO. Life is too short as it is.
I also believe that the medicine should have been recalled in addition to the nurses and rest of the staff being more careful.
I have worked in the quality and risk management arena of hospitals and have also been on the receiving end of having major surgeries six times in my life. Just prior to the last one, I asked them about the drugs they were getting ready to use during my surgery - I was deathly allergic to one that is commonly used for irrigation - she thanked me for asking as that drug was in the mix. That would have been an error on their part as it was written all over my records! I would not have hesitated to call JCAHO. Life is too short as it is.
Idaho RN
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