Dennis Quaid and wife Sue Heparin Maker

Posted on December 4, 2007 at 12:44 pm (PST)

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dennis-quaid-wife-1 Dennis Quaid and wife Sue Heparin Maker

Dennis Quaid and wife Kimberly are suing the manufacturer of Heparin, a drug of which the couple’s newborn twins were administered an overdose last month.

According to a lawsuit filed Dec. 4 in Cook County (Chicago) Circuit court, the Quaids are suing Baxter Health Care Corporation, the company responsible for manufacturing and distributing Heparin.

The court papers claim that since the 10-unit vial and the 10,000-unit vials of the drug look the same.

Both, the papers say, "had a blue background color to its label. This fact made them more difficult to distinguish than if they had different background colors."

The Quaid twins were given a Heparin flush to clear out their IV tubes on Nov. 18 at Cedars-Sinai hospital, where they remained after their Nov. 8 birth.

"Instead of receiving the prescribed medication," the lawsuit reads, "a medical error was made by personnel of Cedars-Sinai Hospital and 10,000 units/ml of Heparin were administered instead."

As a result of an accidental overdose, the papers claim, twins "ZOE GRACE QUAID and THOMAS BOONE QUAID, suffered and will continue to suffer injuries of a pecuniary nature."

The couple is seeking $50,000 in damages.

The Quaids should also be suing the hospital. The nurse who gave the medication is 100% responsible for not looking at the number on the bottle to be sure he/she gave the right amount of medication. What’s more alarming is the fact that hospitals are not even supposed to be using Heparin to flush IV lines, especially on infant and pediatric units, but should be using normal saline instead. The person responsible for the overdose was the nurse, and according to initial reports the nurse also overdosed thirteen other infants at the same time.

Even someone who is not a nurse can clearly see the bottles have different colored labels, tops, writing on the label, and there’s a big difference between 10,000 and 10. The nurse was lazy, and he/she needs to pay for that mistake. Baxter should also consider making the 10,000 unit Heparin vial red. The hospital should implement a normal saline only IV flush policy like most other hospitals did more than 10 years ago.

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5 Comments


  1. 1

    Gee… does that mean since every pill dispensed in America gets put in the same brown-amber bottle that everyone should sue Walgreens when they take the wrong pill? Come on, this is insane. The person responsible was the nurse for not looking, but then she doesn’t have mega millions so why sue her… the next best target would be the hospital for keeping meds close together, but that hospital has so much trouble already you wouldn’t win mega million and actually collect… so lets go after the big pockets. I guess when your career is down in the dumps your only chance for a million dollar paycheck is with a lawsuit…. pathetic.

    Comment by Yirmin Snipe — December 4, 2007 #

  2. 2

    WTF?
    Since when is the HOSPITAL not responsible?!

    Well crap … I guess I better sue Tylenol since they look just like asprin.

    Comment by Jill — December 4, 2007 #

  3. 3

    Did not hear…are the Quaid’s seeking punitive damages? Seems seeking $50,000 in damages is appropriate to me. They can deal with the hospital on their own terms.

    Comment by John Rankin — December 4, 2007 #

  4. 4

    I have been working on a pediatric oncology, hematology, bone marrow transplant inpatient unit as an RN for 5 years. I am not sure if you were referring to central lines, or peripheral lines when you mentioned they are to be flushed with saline only. That is not the standard of care for proper care of maintenance of a central line. Central lines go directly into the superior vena cava, and MUST be flushed with varying concentrations/doses of heparin, (depending upon the type of line, the size of the line, and the age of the patient)or they would clot off and need to be replaced. Replacement of central lines is performed under general anesthesia, and must be avoided at all cost. This is true of any patient with a cental line, including babies in the neonative intensive care unit, who weigh only grams. It is the standard of care that peripheral lines are commonly flushed with much lower doses of heparin, especially when they are very small bore, to avert clotting. This helps to avert the traumatic, painful process of re-inserting an IV catheter that could clot when not being used for infusion. All lines are first flushed with saline, and then “heplocked” with the appropriate heparin.

    ***Editor Note***
    The lines I referred to in the article were peripheral lines, which are commonly referred to as Heparin-locks, or Saline-locks. If I had meant a central line, I would have used port-a-cath, central line, PICC, etc. You are incorrect in saying central lines are inserted using “general anesthesia.” Jugular, PICC (which is inserted in the ante-cubital), and subclavian vien central lines can all be inserted using local anethesia such as lidocaine. In the intensive care unit a patient is put into reverse trendelenburg to ensure a good blood flashback so the physician knows he/she is in the vien. A port-a-cath on the other hand, which is implanted, is inserted under general anesthesia, and is used for long term medical treatment of cancer patients most often. Using local anesthesia is preferred for everything except for a port-a-cath especially in pediatric and infants due to their sensitivity to all medications, especially someting as potent as anesthesia. Your hospital physicains may prefer to use general anesthesia for their pediatric cancer patients, however, they are putting those patients at an unnecessary risk.

    Since central lines require completely different care, and are only inserted for long-term IV therapy, the nurse would not flush the line with normal saline, but would instead use Heparin. In all peripheral lines meant for short term care, and usually only last about 3 days, those lines should only be flushed with normal saline.

    Thank you for reading HG Lauren, and special thanks to you for caring for those young children who need a caring caregiver the most.

    Comment by Lauren — December 6, 2007 #

  5. 5

    I am researching the affects of an over-dose of Heparin. A dear friends son, age approxiametly 12 years of age, went into cardiac arrest after receiving a “flush” to a “shunt” from surgery to remove a tumor in his brain. They live out of state and the death just happened on Dec.7th. Due to what happened to Dennis Quaid’s twins, this situation has come to the attention of alot of people. I don’t know if this had a connection to Zane’s death, but I am glad to be aware of it. I know that nurses are people too and are subject to mistakes, but they hold lives in their hands. I am praying for answers to why this boy had to die. No amount of money will bring back a loved one, but hospitals have to do all they can to prevent such unfortunate incidences. I hope there are no long term medical effects for Dennis’s children.

    Comment by Diane — December 7, 2007 #

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