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Archive for the ‘Consumer Safety’ Category

Parkinson’s Medications Comes with Some Serious Side Effects

Monday, February 20th, 2012

Ropinirole, also known as Requip, is a prescription medication used by physicians to treat Parkinson’s disease and restless leg syndrome. This popular medication helps many to deal with Parkinson’s, but it does not come without side effects.

The listed side effects are constipation, dizziness, sweating, lightheadedness, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting and weakness. The Federal Drug Administration (FDA) also listed “falling asleep during activities of daily living” as a warning in the medication’s literature.

“Patients treated with Ropinirole have reported falling asleep while engaged in activities of daily living, including the operation of motor vehicles, which sometimes resulted in accidents,” read the medication’s instructions in their listed warnings and side effects.

A research study from the Mayo Clinic Proceedings turned up some interesting results as well. They studied the medication’s effects on 267 patients over a two-year span. Almost 20% of the subjects experienced hyper sexuality and, believe it or not, compulsive gambling.

According to the National Parkinson Foundation, exercising can help control many of the symptoms of Parkinson’s Disease. You may want to consider alternatives to Ropinirole. Have you or a loved one ever been harmed by defective drugs?

Wooten, Kimbrough & Normand, P.A.—Orlando personal injury attorneys.

US Pharmaceutical Error Statistics

Monday, February 13th, 2012

When you have your prescription filled, you assume the pharmacist is exercising caution and filling your script correctly. Most people don’t even think about whether the script is correct. But what happens when a pharmacy error injures, or even kills you or a loved one? It may occur more often than you would like to think. Pharmacists should be held to the same safety standard as doctors and other health car providers—their patients’ lives are at risk in the same way. Here are some facts to keep in mind regarding pharmacy errors, courtesy of B Braun USA:

  • Medical and pharmaceutical errors cause 7,000 deaths annually in the United States.
  • Injuries due to adverse drug effects total more than 770,000 injuries or deaths annually, and on average cost each hospital $5.6 million.
  • The average patient who suffered an adverse drug effect while in the hospital stays on average 8 to 12 days longer, costing them $16,000-$24,000 more in healthcare costs.
  • According to one study, two out every 100 hospitalized patients experience a preventable adverse drug effect.
  • Adverse drug effects that are considered preventable cost the healthcare system in the United States approximately $2 billion annually.

 

Legislators are attempting to fight the problem, but there is no easy solution, and mistakes are bound to happen. Misreading labels causes a significant number of the pharmacy errors. One way around these errors is to place bar codes on the scripts so the pharmacists can just scan them instead of having to read them.

 

“You’ve got health-care professionals who are in a hurry, seeing many, many patients,” says Assistant U.S. Health Secretary Bobby Jindal. “This [bar codes on prescription medications] allows them to rely on a computer to make sure they’re giving the right amount of medicine or that they don’t give the wrong medicine.”

 

Have you or a loved one ever had an error in a prescription you filled at a pharmacy? It is important that you report these errors and contact an attorney to recover any damages you may be entitled to.

 

Wooten, Kimbrough & Normand, P.A.—Orlando personal injury attorneys.

School Bus Accident Statistics

Friday, February 10th, 2012

When you ride on a bus, you assume that the driver is properly trained and drives cautiously. This is normally the case. The effects of a bus accident can be tragic, however, and can kill or injure many people at once. Bus drivers, like all commercial drivers, are held to a higher safety standard because they pose more of a threat to other motorists as well as their own passengers.

Bus accidents are even more tragic and terrifying when they are school buses. When parents send their children to school or on a trip, the last thing they want to do is worry about their safety the entire time. School buses provide the US with its most popular form of mass transit, carrying approximately 9 million passengers a year—approximately double the number of commercial buses.

According to reports, there have been 1,450 bus accident fatalities since 1990. Most of these accidents occur between the hours of 3 and 4 p.m., when schools are letting out. 45% of all school bus accidents involve front-end impact.

School bus transportation is still relatively safe. In 2003, 45 states did not experience a single school bus accident fatality. However, accidents do happen, and sometimes they are unavoidable. Has your child been injured in a school bus accident?

Wooten, Kimbrough & Normand, P.A.—Orlando personal injury attorney.