Posted On: December 28, 2010

Medication Therapy Management and the Prevention of Medication Error

According to the American Pharmacists Association (APhA), medication-related events are a massive problem to this country’s public health and well being. As our Baltimore medication error injury attorneys have reported in a related blog, according to the APhA, 1.5 million people are injured by medication errors every year, that cost around $177 billion in personal injury and death, and could be preventable.

Ed Webb, associate executive director of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy, recently stated that prescribed medication is only beneficial if taken correctly, and if medication therapy is not managed well, it can do harm. Webb, along with other experts, recommends medication checkups, known in the business as medication therapy management, or MTM.

As our Baltimore pharmacy error attorneys also discussed recently in a blog, more and more people are being encouraged to make appointments with their pharmacists as well as their doctors to discuss the medications that they take in an effort to prevent medication error, pharmacy misfill or patient injury.

Patients reportedly often end up saving money when meeting with pharmacists, by switching prescriptions to generic drugs instead of brand-name, or dropping medications that they may no longer need. Other patients are often able to eliminate medication side effects with help from a pharmacist on the best time to take the medication, possibly changing to a different drug, or avoiding a potentially dangerous mix-up of drugs, which can lead to expensive trips to urgent care or emergency rooms and result in personal injury.

Continue reading " Medication Therapy Management and the Prevention of Medication Error " »

Posted On: December 22, 2010

CVS Pharmacy Misfill Mixes up Child’s Hyperactivity Drug with Methadone

In recent news that our Baltimore pharmacy error attorneys have been following, a nine-year-old child in Las Vegas reportedly received an accidental pharmacy misfill at a local CVS Pharmacy, after his hyperactivity medication was filled with methadone, a drug frequently used to treat withdrawal and dependence problems with people who are addicted to Heroin.

Tammy Jordan claimed that her son, Kyren, an active kid, is sometimes prescribed the drug Methylphenidate, to help treat his hyperactivity disorder. Jordan claims that she didn’t even check after picking up the prescription from CVS, as this was a common medication for her son.

According to KTNV.com, Jordan reportedly noticed that after Kyren had been taking the prescription misfill for an entire month, he couldn’t sit still, and couldn’t tell his mother why. A few weeks later, after dropping off the medication at Kyren’s school, the nurse called Jordan, and was alarmed that Kyren was taking Methadone and not Methylphenidate—the medication that the nurse regularly gave to the child.

Jordan claims that she was shocked by the medication error, and stopped Kyren from taking any more of the drug. He reportedly went through a period of withdrawal, but made a full recovery with no injury. Once Kyren recovered, she reportedly approached CVS, where the pharmacist on duty took the bottle and peeled off the first label, revealing that another label had been mistakenly placed on top of Kyren’s medication.

The state Board of Pharmacy is reportedly looking into the prescription drug misfill, to decide what exactly what happened, and how to prevent prescription filling errors from happening in the future.

In a recent blog our Baltimore pharmacy error injury lawyers discussed tips for preventing pharmacy misfills when picking up your child’s prescription at the pharmacy, including verifying the medication, always double checking the name on the prescription, the dosage, usage, and whether the drug is suitable for your child’s weight and size.

Continue reading " CVS Pharmacy Misfill Mixes up Child’s Hyperactivity Drug with Methadone " »

Posted On: December 3, 2010

State Rep. Robert Nutting Disciplined for Pharmacy Misfill

Republican State Representative Robert Nutting, who was recently chosen to be Maine’s speaker of the House, and is also a pharmacist, has recently been disciplined by a state agency, for a pharmacy misfill, that allegedly occurred in August of 2009.

According to an article in the Times Record, that our Baltimore pharmacy misfill injury attorneys have been following, while Nutting was working as a pharmacist at Wal-Mart, he erroneously filled a customer’s prescription with Zolpidem, an anti-psychotic medication, instead of a prescription for the anti-depressant drug Zoloft. The Times Record reported that the customer discovered the pharmacy misfill before the medication was taken.

On October 1, 2010, Nutting reportedly received a letter from the Maine Department of Professional and Financial Regulation detailing the consent agreement for the incident, that Nutting signed with the attorney general’s office and the department. Nutting acknowledged the error and stated that as a pharmacist he should be disciplined.

Nutting reportedly agreed to a written department warning, paid a $100 penalty, and completed a continuing education course approved by the board on the topic of prescription misfills. Nutting stated that this state disciplinary action due to the pharmacy misfill has no relevance to his election as Maine’s speaker of the House.

Continue reading " State Rep. Robert Nutting Disciplined for Pharmacy Misfill " »

Posted On: December 1, 2010

Healthcare Center Sued for Wrongful Death After Man Dies from Pain Medication Overdose

In recent news that our Washington D.C. nursing home attorneys have been following, a medication error lawsuit has been filed against a local hospital in Salt Lake City, after a patient died from receiving an alleged overdose of a potent pain medication.

According to Deseret News, Clarence Burton was admitted to Woodland Care Center on August 1, 2008, to be supervised by nurses while he underwent radiation and chemotherapy treatment at St. Mark’s Hospital. Burton was reportedly fighting bone cancer, and had been prescribed the brand name pain medication patches Duragesic, containing the strong medication fentanyl to help him deal with the pain.

The lawsuit alleges that the care center staff members made a grave medication mistake when they failed to follow the doctor’s prescription, which was to give Burton one 50-milligram pain patch every 72 hours. The manufacturer of Duragesic also advises to wait 72 hours before increasing the pain medication dosage. Instead, the staff allegedly applied three pain medication patches on Burton’s neck, and he was found a few hours later, lying the floor in complete cardiac arrest.

When Woodland was met by the emergency personnel, they were reportedly unable to revive him, and he was taken to the hospital, where he was given another drug to counteract the fentanyl overdose. Burton was later resuscitated, but according to the lawsuit, remained unresponsive, as he had sustained sepsis, renal insufficiency, and elevated liver function as a result of the alleged malpractice. Burton was taken to another care center six days later, where he died on August 9, 2008.

Continue reading " Healthcare Center Sued for Wrongful Death After Man Dies from Pain Medication Overdose " »