Latest news with #medicationerror


Daily Mail
3 days ago
- Health
- Daily Mail
ADHD drug mix-up led to my son, 6, receiving lethal dose of highly addictive meds... my warning to parents
A mix up at a pharmacy proved nearly fatal after a six-year-old's ADHD medication was accidentally swapped with a lethal dose of opioids. Sarah Paquin, a mother-of-three from British Columbia in Canada, said her son Declan had been taking dextroamphetamine to treat his attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder for years. Paquin picked up his prescription as she always did from a local Shoppers Drug Mart pharmacy, and didn't notice anything unusual. However, when her husband David went to give Declan his daily medication the next morning, he noticed the pills were a different color. When he checked the label on the bottle, he realized it contained a high dose of the opioid hydromorphone and the name on the prescription was of a woman the family didn't know. Hydromorphone is around four times more potent than morphine. The medication has the possibility of causing life-threatening breathing problems. This risk is particularly high for children due to their smaller size and weight. 'It's just terrifying. We put our trust in these local professionals to be upholding their end,' Paquin said. She's urging people to double-check their medication labels. She told CTV News: '[The pills] were in his hands. 'He would have had this high dosage of morphine and been sent off to school, unknowingly... I think this was entirely avoidable.' Mr Paquin immediately returned the medication to the pharmacy, where the pharmacist gave him a refund but she was unable to find the correct prescription. The order had to be refilled. Commenting on the matter, a spokesperson for Shoppers Drug Mart's parent company, Loblaw PR, told 'Upon review with the store, we have learned this was a case of human error, one 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 owner of this location has reached out to the patient's parents to apologize for any undue stress this may have caused, and to outline the corrective steps.' The Paquin family say they have also been informed the pharmacist responsible for the error has been suspended. They now want to make their story public in a bid to warn other parents about the importance of being vigilant. Mrs Paquin says: '[Patients and parents should] double, triple, quadruple-check every prescription you pick up, whether you've been going to that pharmacy for years, whether it's a medication you've been on for years.' The Paquins have also filed a complaint with the College of Pharmacists of British Columbia about the incident. The organization regulates all pharmacies in the province. The FDA receives over 100,000 reports related to medication errors annually, with these contributing to up to 9,000 deaths. In 2022, a former Tennessee nurse was found guilty of criminally negligent homicide in the death of a patient who was accidentally given the wrong medication. RaDonda Vaught, 37, was also convicted of gross neglect of an impaired adult in a case that fixed the attention of patient safety advocates and nurses' organizations around the country. Vaught injected the paralyzing drug vecuronium into 75-year-old Charlene Murphey instead of the sedative Versed on December 26, 2017.


CTV News
7 days ago
- Health
- CTV News
B.C. mom calls for stricter controls after opioids swapped for son's ADHD medicine
A mother on Vancouver Island is speaking out after she says she was accidentally given the wrong medicine for her son's ADHD. A mother on Vancouver Island is speaking out after she says she was accidentally given the wrong medicine for her son's ADHD. Shoppers Drug Mart says an internal investigation is underway after a mix-up at one of its pharmacies in British Columbia dispensed a powerful prescription painkiller in place of a young child's ADHD medication. Sarah Paquin says her son Declan has been taking dextroamphetamine to treat his ADHD for years, typically sourced from the same Shoppers Drug Mart pharmacy in Comox where the prescription was again refilled last week. 'It wasn't until the next morning, when my husband went to give our son the medication before school, that he noticed that they were a different colour,' she told CTV News. When her husband checked the label on the bottle, he saw that the pills contained a high dosage of hydromorphone, a highly addictive opiate used to treat severe pain. Paquin says her son was moments away from ingesting the drug. 'They were in his hands,' she said. 'He would have had this high dosage of morphine and been sent off to school, unknowingly.' Paquin's husband returned the prescription later that day and told the pharmacist what had happened. The franchise owner called the family on Wednesday to apologize, she said. 'He did also let me know that the employee that I dealt with has been suspended while they do their own internal investigation,' Paquin added. In a statement Thursday, Shoppers Drug Mart's parent company Loblaw described the medicine mix-up as 'a case of human error, one that never should have happened.' 'We have controls in place to minimize risks like this – where the patient was handed the wrong prescription bag,' the statement said, adding the store's management is reviewing those controls with employees to prevent similar mistakes in the future. 'The owner of this location has reached out to the patient's parents to apologize for any undue stress this may have caused, and to outline the corrective steps,' the statement concluded. Paquin says she has filed a complaint with the College of Pharmacists of B.C. about the potentially dangerous error. She urges all patients and parents to 'double-, triple-, quadruple-check every prescription you pick up, whether you've been going to that pharmacy for years, whether it's a medication you've been on for years.' The College of Pharmacists of B.C., which regulates all pharmacies in the province, declined an interview about the incident and would not answer specific questions about the mistake, citing patient privacy concerns. Instead, college spokesperson Lesley Chang provided an emailed statement confirming the regulator has been in contact with the family. 'The College of Pharmacists of B.C. takes all medication incidents very seriously, as public health and safety is our highest priority,' Chang wrote. 'It's important to know that pharmacists are legally required to speak with clients about the prescriptions they are picking up. The consultation is to make sure clients understand their medication, how to take it properly, and address any questions. As part of this, pharmacists are required to confirm client identity, name and strength of drug, purpose of drug, directions, and other information with the client or their representative at the time of dispensing.' Despite those requirements, Paquin says steps to verify the right medication went to the right patient were missed. 'It's just terrifying. We put our trust in these local professionals to be upholding their end,' she said. 'I think this was entirely avoidable.' With files from CTV News Vancouver Island's Andy Garland