Florida parents sue hospital after toddler swallows battery
19-month-old Ava-Kate Parsons has undergone 20 surgeries and may need treatment into her teens
A Florida family is suing a hospital for malpractice, saying Wednesday their baby suffered severe burns because it took too long to remove a coin-sized battery that she swallowed.
Parents Cole Parsons and Courtney Thorne said in a lawsuit that Wolfson Children's Hospital in Jacksonville, Fla., should have taken out the lithium battery within two hours, which is recommended by poison control centres. The parents are also suing Dr. David Smith, who they say downplayed the dangers.
The battery was removed about five hours after the parents arrived at the hospital, the complaint said.
The hospital did not comment on the case, citing privacy laws.
Nineteen-month-old Ava-Kate Parsons has undergone 20 surgeries since she swallowed the battery on March 10. Her mother was at home at the time and saw as her daughter swallowed the coin battery that popped out of a remote control. She rushed to get it out, but it had gone down the child's throat. She called 911.
The National Capital Poison Center, a non-profit call centre, said more than 1,900 children swallowed button batteries last year and there were 20 fatal or major incidents in children younger than six. Those batteries are found in remote controls, calculators and other small devices.
At the hospital, the parents wanted the battery taken out right away because they worried the girl would be exposed to dangerous chemicals. But the father said Smith told them the incident was "no different than a coin in her throat."
"He seemed pretty relaxed about the whole situation," Parsons said. "A little while later, we learned there is an electrical burn taking place in her esophagus, and she was rushed to emergency surgery."
The allegations in the lawsuit have not been tested in court.
Attorney Eric Ragatz said the amount the parents are suing for is yet to be determined. He said they have spent between $300,000 and $400,000 on medical bills, not counting what they spent travelling to Boston to take Ava-Kate for treatment every two weeks. The girl's mother, a nursing assistant, also took a leave from work and only returned part-time to care for her daughter.
Parsons said doctors have told him their daughter may need to continue treatment to stretch out the esophagus well up into her teens. While other toddlers her age experiment with foods of many textures, she can only eat pureed food, which Parsons says has slowed down her growth.
"They really don't have a lot to say about what exactly her course is going to be," Parsons said. "We are stressed out about the unknown."