Pharmacy and Medication Errors

Medication errors are becoming more and more common in our country. Serious injuries and even death can result from a prescription drug being administered improperly. These medication errors occur in the hospital or in the doctor’s office or through a retail or mail-order pharmacy. The attorneys at Kane have extensive experience handling medication error cases.  Kane has lectured for a continuing legal education seminar on medication errors, and the firm has handled numerous cases involving medication errors.

 

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Medication errors injure more than 1.5 million people each year and result in the death of at least one person every day in the United States.

 

All too frequently, patients are given the wrong drugs or the wrong doses. And the problem lies at various phases of the medication chain – in the prescribing, packaging, labeling, dispensing, administering and monitoring of drugs. In every case, the victim is the same – the patient.

 

If you or a loved one suffered a serious injury or death as a result of medication error, you may be entitled to compensation.  For a free legal consultation, please contact Kane Legal.

 

 

Some of the common types of medication errors noted by the American Hospital Association are the following.

 

  • Incomplete patient information, such as not knowing about patients’ allergies, other medicines they are taking, previous diagnoses, and test results.
  • Miscommunication of drug orders. This can involve poor handwriting, confusion between drugs with similar names, misplacement of zeroes or decimal points, confusion of metric and other dosing units, and inappropriate abbreviations.
  • Lack of appropriate labeling when drugs are prepared and repackaged into smaller units.
  • Distraction of medical professionals who dispense or prescribe drugs.

 

One-fourth of medication errors were attributed to confusion over similar drug names. Also, the IOM noted “growing unease” about the dispensing of free samples.

 

A number of organizations have recommended systematic changes to reduce the risk of medication errors, such as simplification of printed drug information, much of which is written at a college reading level and is difficult for many people to understand.

 

The IOM suggested that patients ask questions when they are prescribed or given drugs, such as how to take the medications and what they should do in the event of side effects. It also suggested that patients have their doctors give them a printed record of all the drugs they have been prescribed, with the list also including any drug or food allergies they have. The list can be shown to other doctors, such as various specialists.