logo
B.C. mom picks up her son's ADHD medication, is given an opioid instead

B.C. mom picks up her son's ADHD medication, is given an opioid instead

Yahooa day ago

A mother on Vancouver Island is warning people to double check their prescriptions after she was accidentally dispensed the powerful opioid hydromorphone instead of her son's regular ADHD medication.
Comox, B.C., resident Sarah Paquin, 31, says she still shudders to think about what could have happened to her nine-year-old son had her husband not noticed the medication looked different before he gave it to him.
"It was terrifying," Paquin said, standing in her front yard and playing with one of her three boys.
"One simple little mistake like that could have ended horribly."
WATCH | 9-year-old dispensed opioid in pharmacy mix-up:
Paquin says she didn't think too much of it when she went to pick up her son Declan's medication last week and the staff member at her local Shoppers Drug Mart pharmacy didn't check her ID or take out the prescription from the bag.
The next day, her husband was about to give Declan his medication when he saw the pills were a different colour and shape than normal.
Her husband looked at the bottle and noticed the prescription was for someone else, and that it was for hydromorphone. Right away he returned the pills to the pharmacy.
"Immediately your mind goes to the worst case scenario," Paquin said.
"The results could have been catastrophic and it just makes my heart sink to think about what could have happened."
Hydromorphone is a powerful opioid that is two to eight times stronger than morphine and is often used to treat acute pain or chronic cancer pain.
According to the Mayo Clinic, it can cause serious unwanted effects or fatal overdose in children.
Human error
CBC News reached out to Loblaws, the company that owns Shoppers Drug Mart.
In a written statement, the company said the incident was a case of "human error" that never should have happened.
"We have controls in place to minimize risks like this — where the patient was handed the wrong prescription bag — and the associate will review these with employees to avoid a similar situation in the future," the company said.
Paquin says she has since heard from the pharmacist, who was very apologetic. She says he acknowledged that steps were missed and standards were dropped, and told her the employee who dispensed the medication has been suspended pending an internal investigation.
Asking for accountability
Despite his reassurances, Paquin has filed a complaint with the College of Pharmacists of B.C.
"The pharmacy needs to take responsibility, be held accountable for what happened," she said.
In an email, the college told CBC News it takes these types of errors very seriously.
"We have legal requirements in the Health Professions Act bylaws in place to prevent these occurrences, including mandatory standards for prescription preparation to ensure accuracy of the prescription product and consultations for all prescriptions, to make sure clients understand their medication, how to take it properly, and address any questions," the college said.
As part of pharmacists' consultation with clients, they are required to confirm the person's identity, name and the strength and purpose of the drug, it added.
In 2023-24, the college says it received a total of 990 concerns through its intake process. Of those, 54 became formal complaints and investigations, 16 of which were medication related.
Paquin decided to share her ordeal on social media, to warn others to check their prescription before taking it.
"It's scary that it happened to us, but I'm also in a way kind of thankful that it happened to us and we caught it because it could have been given to somebody who didn't notice and got hurt," she said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Is Learned Helplessness Preventing You from Overcoming Trauma? A Therapist Explains
Is Learned Helplessness Preventing You from Overcoming Trauma? A Therapist Explains

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Is Learned Helplessness Preventing You from Overcoming Trauma? A Therapist Explains

Learned helplessness. I'd heard the term before, but conflated it with weaponized incompetence, a phenomenon where someone (usually the male partner in a hetero relationship) exerts little or no effort in a task to avoid completing it and/or not being asked to do it again. (Think: the husband who 'doesn't know where the spoons go.') The more I read about learned helplessness, the more I realized these two concepts are the same. Learned helplessness is actually a body's response to trauma—not your toxic masculinity scheming to get out of dishwasher duty. So I spoke with a licensed social worker with over a decade of experience supporting individuals with PTSD, anxiety, depression and other conditions, to better understand what learned helplessness actually is and how to move past it to heal. Lesley Broff is a licensed social worker who graduated from The University of Pittsburgh with her Masters degree in Social Work. She has over 10 years of experience working in community mental health settings with adults with severe mental health diagnoses, adults with disabilities, and children, adults and families with conditions including anxiety, depression, PTSD, ADHD and Autism. Learned helplessness, Broff explains, 'stems from repeated experiences of perceived failure or adversity where nothing [a person has] tried seemed to make a difference.' Essentially, the social worker expands, it's when a person comes to believe they have no control over a situation, even when change is possible: 'In everyday life, it presents in things like giving up easily, not speaking up in challenging situations or assuming efforts won't lead to success—like a student who stops studying because past attempts didn't help, or someone who stays silent in meetings because they believe their voice won't matter.' Learned helplessness can sound like this: Trauma can teach the nervous system to give up. 'Trauma—especially the kind that's prolonged or feels inescapable—can literally rewire the nervous system to believe safety isn't possible,' Broff explains. 'Over time, disengagement or submission becomes a survival strategy.' For survivors of childhood abuse, domestic violence or chronic injustice, learned helplessness can settle in early. You try to fight back. You try to speak up. But when nothing changes—or worse, things escalate—your brain associates effort with futility. So, to survive, you must submit or disengage. 'Learned helplessness is the nervous system's way of saying, 'Survive now, heal later,'' says Broff. While staying small, quiet and helpless may be adaptive in the moment, 'problems arise when this protective strategy continues even after the threat is gone, making it harder to pursue change, growth or connection.' Everyone has rough weeks (or months). But learned helplessness is a pattern. 'If you're noticing a chronic belief that nothing you do will make a difference, across many parts of life—that's a signal,' says Broff. You may find yourself withdrawing from support, brushing off opportunities, or assuming the worst before you even try. It's not a failure of character—it's a conditioned response. Unlearning helplessness isn't about flipping a magical confidence switch. 'In therapy, we work on both thoughts and behaviors,' says Broff. 'We examine the beliefs that keep someone stuck, and we gently test them with small, manageable actions.' One of the most powerful disruptors to learned helplessness, she stresses, is also connection. 'Safe relationships help mirror back your capacity and your value,' says Broff. That could be a therapist, a friend, a support group—or even a familiar object that offers a sense of being held when people don't feel accessible. Broff mentions Percy the 3 Lb. Hug Bear , a sensory bear, which can offer grounding for those whose bodies still feel on high alert. Know this: it's not your fault. 'This way of thinking doesn't come from who you are—it comes from your nervous system, which was trained by your past to expect threats,' says Broff. 'But your past doesn't dictate your future.' Calling All People Pleasers: Here's Everything You Need to Know About Fawn Trauma Response, According to a Therapist

B.C. mom picks up her son's ADHD medication, is given an opioid instead
B.C. mom picks up her son's ADHD medication, is given an opioid instead

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

B.C. mom picks up her son's ADHD medication, is given an opioid instead

A mother on Vancouver Island is warning people to double check their prescriptions after she was accidentally dispensed the powerful opioid hydromorphone instead of her son's regular ADHD medication. Comox, B.C., resident Sarah Paquin, 31, says she still shudders to think about what could have happened to her nine-year-old son had her husband not noticed the medication looked different before he gave it to him. "It was terrifying," Paquin said, standing in her front yard and playing with one of her three boys. "One simple little mistake like that could have ended horribly." WATCH | 9-year-old dispensed opioid in pharmacy mix-up: Paquin says she didn't think too much of it when she went to pick up her son Declan's medication last week and the staff member at her local Shoppers Drug Mart pharmacy didn't check her ID or take out the prescription from the bag. The next day, her husband was about to give Declan his medication when he saw the pills were a different colour and shape than normal. Her husband looked at the bottle and noticed the prescription was for someone else, and that it was for hydromorphone. Right away he returned the pills to the pharmacy. "Immediately your mind goes to the worst case scenario," Paquin said. "The results could have been catastrophic and it just makes my heart sink to think about what could have happened." Hydromorphone is a powerful opioid that is two to eight times stronger than morphine and is often used to treat acute pain or chronic cancer pain. According to the Mayo Clinic, it can cause serious unwanted effects or fatal overdose in children. Human error CBC News reached out to Loblaws, the company that owns Shoppers Drug Mart. In a written statement, the company said the incident was a case of "human error" that never should have happened. "We have controls in place to minimize risks like this — where the patient was handed the wrong prescription bag — and the associate will review these with employees to avoid a similar situation in the future," the company said. Paquin says she has since heard from the pharmacist, who was very apologetic. She says he acknowledged that steps were missed and standards were dropped, and told her the employee who dispensed the medication has been suspended pending an internal investigation. Asking for accountability Despite his reassurances, Paquin has filed a complaint with the College of Pharmacists of B.C. "The pharmacy needs to take responsibility, be held accountable for what happened," she said. In an email, the college told CBC News it takes these types of errors very seriously. "We have legal requirements in the Health Professions Act bylaws in place to prevent these occurrences, including mandatory standards for prescription preparation to ensure accuracy of the prescription product and consultations for all prescriptions, to make sure clients understand their medication, how to take it properly, and address any questions," the college said. As part of pharmacists' consultation with clients, they are required to confirm the person's identity, name and the strength and purpose of the drug, it added. In 2023-24, the college says it received a total of 990 concerns through its intake process. Of those, 54 became formal complaints and investigations, 16 of which were medication related. Paquin decided to share her ordeal on social media, to warn others to check their prescription before taking it. "It's scary that it happened to us, but I'm also in a way kind of thankful that it happened to us and we caught it because it could have been given to somebody who didn't notice and got hurt," she said.

England is launching a gonorrhea vaccine. Is Canada next?
England is launching a gonorrhea vaccine. Is Canada next?

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

England is launching a gonorrhea vaccine. Is Canada next?

England will soon begin administering a vaccine to high-risk individuals that may reduce their chances of contracting gonorrhea, but a similar program is not yet in the cards for Canada. According to studies cited by England's National Health Service, the 4CMenB vaccine, which is presently used in Canada for immunization against meningitis B, has an effectiveness of 32.7 to 42 per cent against gonorrhea. To combat rising infection rates, the health service said last month it will begin administering the vaccine free of charge in August for those deemed to be at high risk of contracting gonorrhea, including gay and bisexual men who have a history of sexually transmitted infection or multiple sex partners. But the vaccine has not been authorized for this use in Canada, even as cases of gonorrhea continue to rise across the country. According to the most recent national statistics, rates of the sexually transmitted infection more than tripled in Canada from 2010 to 2022, going from 11,381 in 2010 to 35,956 in 2022. Gonorrhea, often referred to as "the clap," is passed on through oral, anal or genital sex. People who've been infected, especially women, often show no symptoms at all. If left untreated, it can have serious health risks. In an interview with CBC News on Monday, Calgary physician Caley Shukalek, the chief medical officer for Freddie, an online service that focuses on 2SLGBTQ+ health care, said it's still too soon to know how effective the 4CMenB vaccine will be at preventing new gonorrhea infections. Early research hasn't been conclusive either, Shukalek said, citing another study conducted by researchers in France that suggested the vaccine may not have any statistical effect on gonorrhea rates. "I think in the medical community, there's still a bit of skepticism," he said, noting that more research needs to be done before the true impact is known. The potential upside is promising enough, however, that Shukalek said he has begun prescribing the vaccine to some people who are willing to pay for it out of pocket or through private health insurance. "Its safety is very well established, so for those at high risk of STIs, I think this is a very worthwhile thing and something that could be considered," he said. "But because it's kind of what we call off-label, it absolutely is something that needs to be a discussion between a prescriber and a patient to make sure that it's the right decision based on their individual risk." The vaccine is typically administered in two phases, he said, with the second dose coming at least four weeks after the first. Chris Aucoin is the executive director of the Health Equity Alliance of Nova Scotia, a group that advocates for those living with HIV and members of the 2SLGBTQ+ community. He's aware of the latest research on the use of the 4CMenB vaccine to help prevent the spread of gonorrhea, but notes that even if it's approved, it would only be one part of a potential prevention strategy. Aucoin said the best thing people can do now and in the future to prevent the spread of gonorrhea is to get tested regularly. "If people are concerned about gonorrhea rates, which are too high … the biggest factor in that for me is the fact that people don't test regularly enough." He said the recent launch of Nova Scotia's STI Care Now program, which mails out free at-home testing kits for chlamydia, gonorrhea and HIV to anyone interested across the province, is a positive step toward making this easier. "We now have a tool that's accessible to them in a way that's never been the case in Nova Scotia," he said. In a statement, the Public Health Agency of Canada said the National Advisory Committee on Immunization is monitoring the latest research on the 4CMenB vaccine. In a 2023 report, the advisory committee noted that although the vaccine is not currently authorized for this purpose, it may "offer some level of cross-protection against gonococcal infection." The agency said it expects the committee to further assess this possibility as more evidence becomes available. Nova Scotia's Department of Health and Wellness echoed this statement, noting that it takes its cues on immunization from the committee Those looking to pay out of pocket for the vaccine in the private market would be looking at around $200 per dose, the department said. In 2024, there were 368 new cases of gonorrhea reported in Nova Scotia. MORE TOP STORIES

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store