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The Nurses Are Innocent: The Digoxin Poisoning Fallacy [Paperback]

Gavin Hamilton MD FRCP(C)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Nov 14 2011

In 1980-81, 43 babies died at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children from a supposed digoxin overdose. Serial murder was suspected, leading to the arrest of nurse Susan Nelles. In order to clear Nelles's name, an investigation was launched to find an alternate explanation.

No one on the Grange Royal Commission of Inquiry had expertise in diagnosis. The post-mortem diagnosis of digoxin poisoning was based on a single biochemical test without knowledge of the normal values. Gavin Hamilton's extensive research shows that a toxin found in natural rubber, a digoxin-like substance, might well have been the culprit in the babies' deaths. He clearly demonstrates that explanations other than serial murder account for the cluster of infant deaths at HSC.

What can be learned from this black stain on Canada's judicial system? One lesson certainly stands out: we can't ever again allow a group of unqualified amateur diagnosticians make life-and-death decisions about such important matters as potential serial murders.


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Review

...The real parallel remains unknown to most Canadians even now; it's not that the wrong person was fingered for murder, but that no murders were committed at all. That's the conclusion meticulously and persuasively argued by retired physician Gavin Hamilton in The Nurses are Innocent.

(Maclean's magazine)

About the Author

Gavin Hamilton grew up in St. Thomas, Ontario, and attended UWO Medical School. After practising family medicine for nine years, he studied diagnostic radiology, receiving the fellowship diploma, then practicing as a private radiologist with the rank of assistant professor until retirement. He lives in London, Ontario.


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Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
The Nurses Are Innocent is something of a whistleblower book even now in that some Pharmaceutical companies are still using a rubber compound, that could be dangerous in the manufacture of some syringes.
I found that one of the scientists in the book was given PhD status when he did not have it, but otherwise I felt the book had been well researched. I feel it has an important message for governing health bodies.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great book Jan 24 2013
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Clear and interesting medical investigation which proove that Susan Nelles (a nurse wrongly accused of mudering babies in Toronto in the 80')was indeed innoncent. The identification of the real killer is a total surprise. Great job done by Gavin Hamilton.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating - couldn't put it down Jan 18 2012
Format:Paperback
Yesterday I received a book that I ordered over Christmas. It is called "The Nurses are Innocent - The Digoxin Poisoning Fallacy" by Gavin Hamilton MD. Before bedtime, I had read the whole thing. There are two major themes in the book. The writer is a radiologist who specialised in IVP tests. About 1 in 1000 patients would have a really bad reaction to one of the drugs given to show up the kidneys on x-ray. A very small number of those reactions would result in death from anaphylactic shock. He finally stumbles on the fact that the drug is administered with a syringe with a rubber plunger, and a substance in the rubber is causing the reaction, not the drug itself.

The second theme is about the nurses who were blamed for digoxin poisoning at Sick Kids. I think he makes a good case that the babies dying at Sick Kids in the early 1980's were being poisoned by the same compound, but by build up in the body rather than anaphylactic shock. He really tears apart the bad testing that was done in trying to implicate Susan Nelles. (The Grange Royal Commission of Inquiry is available on the Internet, and it is also required reading for those who do not remember these tragedies.)

After the problem was improved by avoiding natural rubber in the syringes, there was another outbreak which he put down to natural rubber stoppers in drug vials.

Throughout all this, the people at Health Canada were more concerned with not upsetting the manufacturers than in fixing the problem. Unfortunately, nurses are at the forefront of those who administer drugs, and they can get blamed for things that were caused by bureaucratic incompetence and inertia.

My daughter is a nurse, married to a policeman. I have ordered a copy for them.
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