15 January 2008 12:42

Comment on this story

DENNIS QUAID - QUAIDS 'MISLED' BY HOSPITAL

NEWS BY ARTIST ALPHABETICALLY

DENNIS QUAID PHOTOS

Dennis Quaid outside the Ed Sullivan Theatre for the 'Late Show With David Letterman' New York City, USA - 18

Caption: Dennis Quaid (Picture) outside the Ed Sullivan Theatre for the 'Late Show With David Letterman' New York City, USA ....

QUAIDS 'MISLED' BY HOSPITAL

LATEST: DENNIS QUAID and his wife KIMBERLY have launched a stinging attack on a Los Angeles hospital for misleading them about their newborn twins, who nearly died from a shocking drugs overdose. Quaid's twins Thomas Boone and Zoe Grace were left fighting for their lives when they were mistakenly given 1,000 times the normal 10-unit dose of blood-thinning drug Heparin by staff at L.A.'s Cedar's Sinai Medical Center shortly after they were born to a surrogate mother in November (07). The twins have since been discharged after doctors gave them the all-clear, and they are back home with their parents. But speaking about it for the first time, the actor reveals he and his wife didn't know until the next morning that their children had been treated for a drugs overdose. He says, "Our kids could have been dying and we wouldn't have been able to come down to the hospital to say goodbye. "When you go into a hospital, you become like a child, like an infant in a way. The names of the drugs, we can't even pronounce... We put complete trust, and we are so vulnerable like a child, innocent and vulnerable in a hospital situation." His wife Kimberly described the moment the couple first saw the twins. She says, "They were in incubators with cords attached to them and monitors, and you could barely hold them. "Every time you'd move them, the alarms would sound... The stress was overwhelming."


15 January 2008 12:42


Tags: DENNIS QUAID - KIMBERLY






DENNIS QUAID News Letter

Subscribe to this news alert service to receive news and reviews on DENNIS QUAID

Sign Up Now


Comment on this story





©2009 Contactmusic.com Ltd, all rights reserved