Key Points
- The webinar was led by Michael Cohen, president and founder of the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP).
- Timothy Vanderveen, vice president of the Carefusion Center for Safety and Clinical Excellence, called Cropp's conviction
"a terrible injustice to the pharmacist," adding that "this was not a criminal act, this was a system error."
- ISMP president Cohen said, in response to a question. "I am disappointed with my colleagues in Ohio and their silence in this
case ... I expected better of the Board of Pharmacy who, Eric Cropp's attorney has said, acted like a kangaroo court."
- Robert Wachter, MD, professor and chief of medicine at the University of California San Francisco, said, "I believe fully
that what happened in this case was wrong ... The criminal system has no place in dealing with professional mistakes."
Eric Cropp was a victim of his own pharmacy error.
The former supervising pharmacist at Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital in Cleveland is nearing the end of a six-month jail
term after signing off on a misprepared chemotherapy treatment that killed two-year old Emily Jerry in 2006. Pharmacy technician
Katie Dudash, who prepared the fatal dose, was not charged.
"This was a terrible injustice to the pharmacist," said Timothy Vanderveen, vice president of the CareFusion Center for Safety
and Clinical Excellence. "This was not a criminal act, this was a system error. As so often happens, the clinician involved
has become a second victim."
Vanderveen introduced a webinar examining the error that was led by Michael Cohen, president and founder of the Institute
for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP). The fatal mistake was a compounding of an etoposide solution with hypertonic saline
instead of normal saline, Cohen explained. Cropp failed to catch the technician's solution switch because there was no system
in place that could have allowed him to spot and stop the hypertonic admix. "I am disappointed with my colleagues in Ohio and their silence in this case," Cohen said, in response to a question. "I expected
better of my fellow pharmacists, I expected better of the judge, and I expected better of the Board of Pharmacy who, Eric
Cropp's attorney has said, acted like a kangaroo court.
"The Board found no system errors on the part of the hospital, which was clearly wrong," Cohen continued. "The hospital pharmacy
made significant changes to their processes and physical facilities since this error occurred. This was purely a tragic accident,
a system error. Like too many healthcare professionals who make mistakes, Eric has become another victim."
The error began on Sunday, Feb. 26, 2006. Cropp arrived at the pharmacy to find a computer system that had been offline for
maintenance, a backlog of drug orders, a short staff, and an IV prep tech who was planning her wedding.
The IV prep area was cramped and crowded on the best of days, Cohen reported. IV preparation protocols were incomplete and
not strictly enforced, and hypertonic sodium chloride was within easy reach. ISMP has long called for hypertonic solutions
to be kept under lock and key or in a separate, hard-to-access area to guard against accidental substitutions with normal
tonic solutions.
In this case, the technician prepared the chemotherapy dose using 23.4 percent saline instead of 0.9 percent saline. An empty
saline bag next to the finished chemotherapy preparation suggested that the dose had been prepared using the proper base solution.
In testimony to the state pharmacy board, the patient's mother, Kelly Jerry, said her daughter woke up after treatment groggy,
thirsty, and with a terrible headache before falling into a coma. The girl died from hypernatremia.
"Eric Cropps's incompetence goes far beyond conducting one reckless act," Jerry said in prepared testimony to the Board of
Pharmacy. "Eric Cropp consciously disregarded any and every set standard of protocol regarding patient safety. How many more
people does Eric Cropp have to kill before his license is revoked? Isn't our daughter Emily's death one too many?"
The Board permanently revoked Cropp's pharmacy license in 2007. He was also charged with reckless homicide and involuntary
manslaughter. The reckless homicide charge was dropped when Cropp agreed to plead no contest to involuntary manslaughter.
There was little alternative to the plea bargain, said Cleveland attorney Richard Lillie, who represented Cropp. Ohio law
uses strict liability to define involuntary manslaughter, which left Cropp with no defense. He was sentenced to six months
in jail, six months of home confinement, a $5,000 fine, and court costs.
"I believe fully that what has happened in this case is wrong," said medical safety expert Robert Wachter, MD, professor and
chief of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. "The criminal system has no place in dealing with professional
mistakes. Even Emily's dad, Chris Jerry, said, 'I know it was a mistake.' The criminal justice system might have a rare role
in egregious, reckless behavior, but accountability for professional mistakes should be at the professional level."
Cohen said that Cropp wants to work with ISMP to help prevent similar errors in other institutions.