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HEALTH EFFECTS:
$750,000 Given in Child's Death in Fluoride Case
DIRECTORY: FAN
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> Fluoride Treatments at Dental Office
NEW YORK TIMES
January 20, 1979
$750,000 Given in Child's Death in Fluoride Case: Boy,
3, Was in City Clinic for Routine Cleaning
A State Supreme Court jury awarded $750,000 to the parents of a
3-year-old Brooklyn boy who, on his first trip to the dentist in
1974, was given a lethal dose of fluoride at a city dental clinic
and then ignored for nearly five hours in the waiting rooms of a
pediatric clinic and Brookdale Hospital while his mother pleaded
for help, and he lapsed into a coma and died.
Mrs Kennedy testified that she took William, born on February 7,
1971, for his first dental checkup on May 24, 1974 to the Brownsville
Dental Health Center, a city clinic at 259 Bristol Street.
There, he was examined by Dr. George, who found no dental caries
and turned the boy over to Miss Cohen, a dental hygienist, for routine
teeth-cleaning. After cleaning William's teeth, witnesses explained,
Miss Cohen, using a swab, spread a stannous fluoride jell over the
boy's teeth as a decay-preventive.
According to Mrs. Kennerly, Miss Cohen was engrossed in conversation
while working on William and, after handing him a cup of water,
failed to instruct him to wash his mouth out and spit out the solution.
Mrs. Kennerly said William drank the water.
According to a Nassau County toxicologist, Dr. Jesse Bidanset,
William ingested 45 cubic centimeters of 2 percent stannous fluoride
solution, triple an amount sufficient to have been fatal.
William began vomiting, sweating and complaining of headache and
dizziness. His mother, appealing to the dentist, was told the child
had been given only routine treatment. But she was not satisfied,
and was sent to the Brookdale Ambulatory Pediatric Care Unit in
the same building.
Mrs. Kennerly testified that she had waited there two and a half
hours, appealing for help, as her son became progressively more
sick, lapsing into what she thought was sleep, but actually a coma.
Finally taken into an examination room, the boy was seen by Dr.
Bathia, who summoned a supervisor. They injected adrenaline into
the boy's heart to revive him. An ambulance took him to Brookdale
Hospital, a five-minute drive away.
There, William and his mother waited more than an hour. By then,
he had lapsed back into a coma, and as doctors attempted to pump
his stomach, he went into cardiac arrest, and died at 2:10 p.m.
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NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
June 9, 1977
Blame City, Hospital in Boy's Death
By Daniel O'Grady
A 3-year-old Brooklyn boy who died of an overdose of fluoride after
treatment at a city dental clinic was the victim of medical malpractice
according to a Brooklyn Supreme Court malpractice screening panel.
The boy's family is suing for $1 million.
By unanimous vote, the panel, made up of Supreme Court Justice
John Monteleone, Dr. Clifford Cohen and attorney Jack Sternglass,
found the city and Brookdale Hospital guilty of medical malpractice
in the case of William Kennerly, who died of the fatal dose of fluoride
on May 24, 1974.
His mother, Inez Kennergy, 42, of 300 Dumont Ave., Brownsville,
Brooklyn, had taken William to the Brownsville Dental Health Center,
259 Bristol St., for routine dental work. Mrs. Kennerly and her
husband, Clay, a transit worker, have seven other children.
Lapese Into Coma
Center workers smeared a fluoride paste, which is safe when applied
in small amounts, on William's teeth and he became violently ill
shortly afterwards. William, according to evidence presented to
the panel, started vomiting and sweating and complained of headaches
and then lapsed into a coma in his mother's arms.
She rushed the child into the Brookdale pediatric care unit, which
was in the same building. The distraught mother and the sick child
had to wait three hours for treatment, it was charged. Later, Mrs.
Kennerly took William to nearby Brookdale Hospital, where, it was
said, they had to wait another hour and a half.
William died two hours after arriving at the hospital. An autopsy
revealed that he died from an overdose of fluoride.
A doctor testifying on behalf of the Kennerlys told the panel that
the boy's life could have been saved merely by giving him a glass
of salt water.
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