A Margate woman thought that her anticoagulant medication would keep her healthy and safe -- free of life-threatening blood clots and embolisms.
But Fela Netkin claims that a mishap at her neighborhood pharmacy -- in which she may have accidentally been given five times the prescribed dosage of her medication -- could have been far more dangerous than any clot.
Netkin dropped off her prescription -- 45, 1 MG tablets of warfarin sodium -- at the Sav-a-Lot pharmacy in Margate
on June 1, court docs claim.
She says that the meds she picked up -- and unwittingly took -- were actually quite different from what her doc had prescribed: 45, 5MG tablets of warfarin sodium.
Under normal circumstances, the popular blood thinner has few side effects.
If patients ingest too much, however, they can bruise and bleed severely from their gums and nose as well as cough up and
urinate blood.
Because
the pharmacy "negligently failed to use due and proper care," she says,
she suffered bruising, bleeding, and had to be hospitalized, Broward County Civil Court filings indicate.
Her
husband, Abraham Netkin, has also joined the lawsuit.
He says that the couple
needs money to pay for Fela's medical care.
The Pulp is waiting for comment from Sav-a-Lot.
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