Healthy Balance

Distractions Lead to Accidental Poisonings, Medication Mistakes During Back-to-School Time

UVA’s Blue Ridge Poison Center gets 30,000 phone calls a year. When you hear that number, you might think of snakebites or toddlers finding cleaning products under the bathroom sink.

Medication mistakes are common before school when parents are busy and preoccupied.
Medication mistakes are common before school when parents are busy and preoccupied.

But many of those calls come as a result of medication mistakes. And medication mistakes are common at the start of the school year.

Consider these typical scenarios:

“The biggest problem with back-to-school is the change in routine,” says Kristin Wenger, the Blue Ridge Poison Center’s education coordinator. “Everybody has a new deadline, there are lunches that have to be packed, and adults get distracted.”

Toddlers see their parents or older siblings taking medicine and want to imitate them, Wenger explains. They’ll grab pills sitting out when a parent’s back is turned, even just for a second. And even one dose of some medications can be dangerous to a toddler, including drugs prescribed for common conditions like heart problems, depression and diabetes.

Prevent Medication Mistakes and Other Poisonings  

Wenger offers these tips to keep your family safe during back-to-school and throughout the year:

Wenger encourages you to call the Poison Center even if you’re not sure anything happened. “A lot of people don’t want to call if there are no obvious symptoms because they don’t want to bother our nurses. But we’d much rather have them call,” she says. “Sometimes symptoms are delayed and there are steps you can take to prevent someone from getting sick or sicker.”

Calling the Poison Center can also save you a trip to the doctor or emergency room.  In 2011, 67 percent of Poison Center callers were able to manage symptoms at home.

Learn more about the Blue Ridge Poison Center and take a poison trivia quiz.

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