Clinical director supports law change calls after two-month-old dies after allegedly given wrong dosage
Photo:
Supplied
Warning: This story has details of the death of an infant.
A Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) clinical director is supporting calls for a law change mandating medication be checked by two people before it's dispensed following the death of a two-month old baby after she was allegedly given medication at an adult dosage by a pharmacy.
A member of the national executive of the Pharmaceutical Society agreed a change is needed, but said pharmacists need to be better resourced, adding the New Zealand pharmacy workforce "is in crisis".
RNZ revealed Bellamere Arwyn Duncan died at Starship Hospital
on 19 July. The two-month-old was allegedly given an adult dosage of phosphate by a Manawatū pharmacy. A coroner's preliminary opinion is she died from phosphate toxicity.
The revelations have prompted the Ministry of Health and Health New Zealand to "urgently" undertake a joint review into the incident with Medsafe visiting the pharmacy to ensure they are safe to continue operating. The Pharmacy Council, which is also investigating, said it's "clear that an awful error has occurred".
Bellamere's parents are calling for a law change that would make it mandatory for medication to be checked by two people before it is dispensed.
Do you know more? Email
sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz
University of Otago's Dr Jason Wister, a Senior Medical Officer neonatologist and Dunedin Hospital's Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) clinical director, told RNZ he was in favour of the suggested law change.
"I would be very supportive of that. That is the policy that we have in the NICU. I think that's fairly standard practice within NICUs, that all medications require two people to check them before dispensing.
"It seems like that would be a safe, low-risk, high-reward situation that would take very little time and effort to mandate."
Dr Wister said phosphate was "well known" as a potential for toxicity, especially in infants with "significant morbidity and mortality associated with it".
Bellamere Duncan's parents were allegedly given an adult dosage of phosphate by the pharmacy.
Photo:
Supplied
The medication was prescribed for preterm infants for their bone health and bone growth, he said, and a safe dose for a baby would depend on its weight.
The label on the medication Bellamere was given directed her parents to dissolve one 500mg tablet of phosphate twice daily in a glass of water.
Her parents gave her three bottles in 24 hours as had been recommended, totalling 1500mg.
Dr Wister said the total amount she received would have resulted in a "massive overdose".
"With regards to the effect of the phosphate toxicity, it would most likely be due to causing hypocalcemia (low calcium).
"Phosphorus and calcium are in balance. As phosphorus increases, calcium decreases. An abrupt increase in phosphorus levels could have led to severe hypocalcemia which can cause seizures, muscle stiffening, cardiac arrhythmia, and laryngospasms."
Lanny Wong a pharmacist, director of Mangawhai Pharmacy and a member of the national executive of the Pharmaceutical Society told Checkpoint Bellamere's death was "devastating" and she supported a "full, transparent investigation so the lesson can be learned from this tragedy".
Wong said dispensing medicine like phosphate was "not a routine process" for a community pharmacy.
"It is considered quite a complex process, require precise calculations, specialist knowledge and full attention."
She said phosphate was given in a dispersible tablet.
"It does require the pharmacist to have full attention to do the calculation, and sometimes to cross check the dose against the weight of the baby and with the prescriber before the dispensing go out."
Wong said she was "fortunate" she had multiple pharmacists in her pharmacy, and had her prescriptions checked by another pharmacist if she was doing a "complex dispensing".
Asked if there needed to be changes mandating a second check, she said there did, but said pharmacists needed better support.
"I think it needs to change, but to change it, we need to be well resourced. We need to be well funded, and we need to be supported. That's what we need. But at the moment, we're simply not supported - let's just be frank, New Zealand pharmacy workforce is in crisis."
Wong said New Zealand had 7.95 pharmacists for every 10,000 people compared to 9.3 in Australia, 9.1 in the United Kingdom and 9.6 in the USA.
"So we are absolutely stretched. So our number do matter. There's a lower density of pharmacist means there's more pressure on people, longer working hours, reduced rate, and all the vital safety check has been compressed at the moment.
"And on top of that, pharmacies are acting like a shock absorber as well for the rest of the primary health system. You know, for people that can't see GP, they're actually going to go see their pharmacist. And, you know, and the government wanting us to do more vaccinations and our jobs is becoming more complex, but we haven't received the funding or the support to help us do this."
Bellamere was flown to Starship Hospital after she suddenly stopped breathing.
Photo:
RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly
On Monday, a police spokesperson confirmed to RNZ police were undertaking inquiries on behalf of the coroner. If police detected any criminality then it would be up to the coroner to decide if they paused their inquiry while police carried out further investigations.
Health Minister Simeon Brown told RNZ on Monday he raised the incident with the Director-General of Health as soon as he was made aware.
"She assured me that there would be an investigation undertaken by both the Ministry of Health and Health New Zealand. That investigation is underway.
"I am advised that this incident has led to Medsafe undertaking an urgent assessment of the pharmacy. A further investigation is being undertaken by the Pharmacy Council, and the death is also the subject of a Coroner's inquest."
Health agencies would provide information to the coroner as needed to support the inquest.
"It is important that the reviews are undertaken, and that the circumstances that led to this incident are understood. I expect that these investigations may propose recommendations, and that these will be reviewed once reports are complete."
Labour health spokeswoman Ayesha Verrall said in a statement to RNZ she was "horrified" to hear of Bellamere's death.
"I will follow the outcome of the review closely to see if there are opportunities to stop this from happening again."
A Health and Disability Commissioner (HDC) spokesperson said the Pharmacy Council had notified HDC of the incident as was required under the Health Practitioners Competence Assurance Act.
"HDC has referred this complaint back to the Pharmacy Council to manage as we consider they are best placed to address the issues raised."
The Pharmacy Council said they were unable to comment further when asked by RNZ on Monday whether they supported calls for a law change.
"Our enquiry and investigation processes are currently underway and, until these are complete, we cannot provide any further details. At the end of the process, we will make any recommended changes to ensure as best as possible an event like this does not happen again."
Pharmac's Director Equity and Engagement, Dr Nicola Ngawati told RNZ medicine doses for children were generally worked out based on the child's weight.
"And so many formulations for children are oral liquids to allow for accurate dosing. These oral liquids may also be more suitable for certain adults, for example, people who are unable to swallow tablets.
"Whether or not a medicine is manufactured in an oral liquid formulation is a commercial decision for pharmaceutical companies."
Pharmac was always happy to consider funding medicines in an oral liquid form, one of our factors for consideration is suitability," Dr Ngawati said.
While in hospital Bellamere's mum, Tempest Puklowski gave Bellamere her drops for Vitamin D. Nurses also administered her phosphate.
When they left hospital they were given some Vitamin D in a little bottle, and a prescription for iron and Vitamin D.
The following day Bellamere's father, Tristan Duncan went to a Manawatū pharmacy with the prescriptions. He was given the iron, but said the pharmacy refused to give the Vitamin D as the staff thought the dosage was "too high for her age and her weight".
The staff said they would call the neonatal unit and follow-up.
A few days later Puklowski received a call from the unit to organise a home care visit. During the call she was asked if she had any concerns, and Puklowski asked if they had been contacted about the Vitamin D. They had not, and said they would follow up and rewrite the prescription along with a prescription for phosphate.
A day after the phone call, on 2 July, Duncan went to the pharmacy to collect the medication and came home with just the phosphate. Unbeknown to the parents they had allegedly been given an adult dosage of phosphate.
The label on the medication directed them to dissolve one 500mg tablet of phosphate twice daily in a glass of water.
That evening they gave Bellamere her first dose of the medicine in her formula water. They would give her three bottles in 24 hours as was recommended.
The couple noticed in that period that her eating was off, and thought she was "extra gassy," Puklowski said.
"She was still feeding fine. She just wasn't maybe going through a whole bottle compared to what she was," she recalled.
Then, the day after she got her first dosage Bellamere suddenly stopped breathing.
Bellamere was taken to hospital and rushed to the emergency department. Once she was stabilised she was taken to the neonatal unit where she stayed overnight before she was flown to Starship Hospital.
The couple had taken a bottle of the medicine with them to Starship Hospital. She gave it to the staff who saw that they had been given an adult dose. The staff then requested the original prescription which confirmed the script had been written with the correct dosage, but somehow the pharmacy had given the wrong dosage Puklowski said.
"I keep thinking about how much she ended up having and it just makes me feel sick."
Tragically, Bellamere died at Starship Hospital on 19 July.
The couple are adamant they want changes to the system for giving out medication.
"It's the sort of thing that can't really be overlooked," Puklowski said.
"There needs to be something better in effect, rather than just relying on one person to make sure you're getting the right prescription, having at least a few eyes."
The owner of the Manawatū pharmacy that dispensed the medication said in a statement to RNZ the baby's death was "a tragedy".
"Our sympathy is with the family and whānau. This is a very difficult time.
"We are looking into what has happened to try to understand how this took place. There will also be external reviews which we will work with."
RNZ asked the owner how the medication was given at the wrong dosage, whether they disputed the allegations, when the pharmacy became aware the wrong dosage had been given, and what confidence people could have about other medication received from the pharmacy.
The owner said the pharmacy was "devastated about what has happened and are investigating to find out how this occurred".
"It is not appropriate to comment further at this stage."
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
Advertising unapproved medicines not legal, despite government claim
In a statement, Minister for Regulation David Seymour said the restriction on advertising new medicines at medical conferences "is being removed". Photo: RNZ / Mark Papalii Despite a government announcement suggesting it has lifted the ban on advertising unapproved medicines, it remains a criminal offence, warn legal experts. In a joint media release with Health Minister Simeon Brown, Minister for Regulation David Seymour welcomed "confirmation" of two major medical conferences in New Zealand next year, following the rule change to allow advertising of unapproved medicines at trade shows. The Ministry for Regulation had found the "overly cautious approach" was out of step with other recognised jurisdictions, and the government "acted fast to fix it", Seymour said. However, leading intellectual property lawyer Paul Johns - head of litigation for Pearce IP - cautioned the law had not yet changed. "If I were the organiser of these conferences and had seen those media releases, I would be making sure that my sponsors were aware that in fact the law has not changed and any medicines they want to advertise ought to be approved, because the consequences are criminal - there are fines and even imprisonment. "I don't think you would get that far, but they're there." Parliament was currently considering some amendments to the Medicines Act (to enable faster approval of drugs and widen powers for nurse prescribers) but there was nothing to do with advertising, he said. "It's still possible that the government could submit an amendment paper and put this advertising thing in there as well, but they haven't. So they appear to have a policy but they've done nothing about it in terms of legislation." The "great irony" was that under the Therapeutic Products Act - which was repealed by the current administration - the government could have simply introduced new regulations allowing such advertising, Johns noted. "But now they need to amend the Medicines Act." Others have pointed out that medical conferences were planned years in advance, so the new policy could not have been the deciding factor for next year's bookings. In a written response to RNZ's questions, Minister Seymour said the restriction on advertising new medicines at medical conferences "is being removed". "Ending New Zealand's prohibition on advertising medicines at medical conferences and trade shows has sent a message that New Zealand is open for business. That's exactly what medical conference organisers needed to hear, with two already confirmed for 2026." Medicines New Zealand chief executive Dr Graeme Jarvis said New Zealand had been missing out on conferences worth up to $90 million a year because it was impossible to run trade shows alongside them. "So you're actually losing out on not only the income you would get from running the conference and trade show here, but also the tourism spend as well." Clinicians had also been missing out. "Doctors here aren't getting exposed to all of the latest and greatest in terms of conferences, scientific exchange, the information and updates on all sorts of things." However, Auckland University associate professor of psychological medicine David Menkes said it was "misleading" to suggest doctors did not already have access to the latest information about new treatments. "But usually that information comes not from a company rep, it will come from an expert who's presenting as a colleague, rather than as an exhibitor or a sponsor of a conference." The academic psychiatrist said doctors liked to "believe they can't be swayed by corporate largesse" - but studies showed they were not immune. "That's why academic journals require peer review and disclosure of interests." Menkes is a long-time critic of New Zealand's permissive marketing regime : it is the only OECD country - apart from the United States - to allow direct-to-consumer advertising of medicines. Further loosening of the rules could compound the risk of over-prescribing, he said. "You don't want to be held up by red tape and bureaucracy, right? But you also want to have checks and balances in place. "I'm afraid this new policy doesn't have adequate checks and balances against overt promotional behaviour by vested interests." Seymour's office was unable to say when the government was planning to turn the policy into something Parliament could consider.

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
St John's volunteer changes alarm nurses union
The St John charity is planning to axe a programme that puts volunteers in hospital emergency departments. Photo: RNZ / Samantha Gee The head of the nurses' union is "gobsmacked" by St John's plan to get rid of volunteers in hospital emergency departments , and says patients will suffer without them. St John is axing a raft of volunteer programmes by June next year because they were not aligned with its new 10-year strategy. The charity had 1100 volunteers supporting patients in emergency departments, being companions for long stay patients, and helping people find their way around hospitals. They also visit rest homes, reading to residents and helping with grocery shopping. Nurses' Organisation president Anne Daniels said the volunteers were critical in the emergency department she works in. "They are with the patients when we can't be with them because of our workloads," she said. "They get cups of tea, they talk to the patients, they hold their hands. They come and talk to the nurses when a patient needs something, they're just there." Patients would be more at risk without them, she said. "I've had situations where a volunteer has come up to me and said 'I'm not sure that this patient is okay', and asked me to go and check them, and sure enough, they have been in dire need of emergency care." St John said the move was not about cutting costs , but Daniels did not buy that. "I believe that they are narrowing their scope of the help that they are actually giving to their communities," she said. "This is going to have a huge impact on hospitals, the costs are going to soar, the patient harm is going to soar and families and communities are going to be harmed. "I'm gobsmacked. I just cannot believe that this is real." St John said it had to make some tough decisions as it looked to its 10-year strategy. "This change is not about cost saving but ensuring the work we do has the greatest impact and is aligned with our strategic goal of helping people to achieve better health and wellbeing outcomes," it said in a statement. Its deputy chief executive Pete Loveridge told Checkpoint it was working with volunteers to help "transition" them by June next year. "In all deep honesty, I want to ensure these volunteers can still contribute in the same way they are doing now, and we are going to be working over the next 10 months to look for new providers to continue those services," he said. St John was looking into having hospitals and rest homes take over the volunteer programmes, it said. RNZ has approached Health NZ and the Aged Care Association for comment. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
14 hours ago
- RNZ News
Charity looks how best to support mental health of young Māori in rural Bay of Plenty
The project will be led by Luke Gray who is a founder of WĀHI and a trained occupational therapist. Photo: Qiane-Matata-Sipu/ supplied A new research project by youth charity WĀHI is heading out into rural Bay of Plenty to gather the voices of young Māori and investigate how best to support their mental health. The three-year project, funded through a partnership with the Clare Foundation with support from Te Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi, will involve collaboration with local schools including Whakatāne High School, Te Kura o Te Whānau-a-Apanui, and Tarawera High School, and will explore how Māori philosophies and values can be used to shape mental health promotion. The project will be led by Luke Gray, founder of WĀHI and a trained occupational therapist, whose work in the Eastern Bay of Plenty has already reached thousands of rangatahi through the PETRA Programme, an activities-based mental health education initiative. Gray (Ngāti Pūkeko) said it could be hard for anyone but especially rangatahi to step out and say 'I'm struggling'. He believed the best way combat this was to go out to rangatahi before they reached a crisis point, which was why WĀHI engaged with schools. "Especially within our rural setting for whānau to travel two, three hours to come into town for a counselling session for an hour and then travel three hours home in terms of resources for whānau it's pretty inaccessible. And so that was our whakaaro behind WĀHI was about getting to people, getting to whānau rather than waiting for them to come to us." Gray said he loved his work as an occupational therapist but he could see there were other needs within the community that weren't being met. "There was kids who would come through that sort of triaging system and would still need some support but they wouldn't quite meet the criteria. So that was another thing that played into developing this kaupapa with WĀHI charitable trust." Gray's drive to support rangatahi through their mental health struggles was born out of personal experience. He and his two younger sisters grew up in Australia, he moved back to Aotearoa to study when he was 18 and his whānau followed a year later. "When they moved over my sister found it quite difficult to feel like she belonged, when she was 16, it's quite a tender age for people to be uprooted from home or everything they knew and brought over to a whole new country, a whole new community and she found it really, really difficult," he said. She was later diagnosed with anxiety and depression and it all came to a head during an overseas holiday where Gray she hardly left her room. Gray said he went to check up on her to see if she was okay and she reassured him that everything was all right. After the holiday he returned to Auckland to finish his studies and his sister was supposed to start back a school in Whakatāne. "The night before that happened I got a phone call from my mum... saying my sister had been rushed to hospital because she had attempted an overdose." As a big brother that was gutting, he said. He saw some of the things she was going through but didn't know the questions to ask and didn't know how to approach it. After that he had the chance to sit with his sister and listen to what was going on with her, he said. "She told me things were just getting overwhelmed with all the school stuff, she felt like she didn't fit in or didn't belong, she didn't feel like she was good enough or she didn't want to burden people with what she was going through. So all of those types of things is what added up to her attempting that overdose." Gray said his sister is still with them today and she still acts as a massive inspiration for her whānau. A while after that he told her he didn't want this to happen to any other rangatahi and that he wanted them to know they were valued and they were valuable. "And so I said to her, in honour of her bravery and her resilience that I wanted to create this kaupapa and that I wanted to name it after her, so that's where we get the Preventative Education and Training for Resilient Adolescents or the PETRA programme, my sister's name is Petra and it's dedicated to her." Gray is hopeful the project will be able to give rangatahi the tools to recognise emotions within themselves and if it is happening to their mates as well. Rangatahi were well aware of depression and anxiety, a big influence on that was social media, but may not know where to turn to get help, he said. "When I start to talk about [covering mental health] I always ask 'has anybody heard of the word depression? Has anyone heard of the word anxiety?' It doesn't matter where I go whether it's out into the middle of Te Urewera, up to Huiarau, or if I go down to Te Kaha, or I'm in Whakatāne in town, it's always above 90 percent of those kids know what those two things are. "They know what those things are and they might be experiencing them, but they don't always have access to the proper services... as a whole I think rural spaces are pretty underserviced." A big part of why they were doing this research was to get a proper understanding about what rangatahi needed in terms of improving their wellbeing and being able to feel they could overcome those challenges, he said. "I think this research is just an avenue for us to explore the voices of those who because of geography sometimes their voices are left out, but sometimes I think those quieter voices are the voices we need to listen to." Gray is working alongside his wife, who is also an occupational therapist, and will be a researcher on this project. His final message to any rangatahi struggling with their mental health is that there is always someone to talk to. "There are supports out there for you and there are people out there who care for you and want to make sure that you're thriving." If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.