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Saturday, June 9, 2007

Prime time for medical error: The doctor’s daughter in the night shift

Seven-year-old Jacquelyn Ley was in the hospital for surgery for her shattered elbow. After surgery, night nurses gave her morphine via a pump, inadvertently setting the dose much too high. Luckily, her mother was there, spending the night in her daughter’s room. She noticed that Jacquelyn was barely breathing, and could have died.

Jacquelyn was lucky because her mother was there and because she knew her stuff: Dr. Carol Ley is Chairman of the Board of the University of Minnesota Medical Center and director of occupational medicine at 3M Company. Dr. Ley says, "the night shift, with its hand-offs and staffing issues, is prime time for medical error."

Advice: Get a patient advocate to be with you in the hospital.

Read another of our night-time stories, or read Max Alexander’s source story in the June 2007 Readers Digest.

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