The baby is in a stable condition at Hawke's Bay hospital. Photo / File
The baby is in a stable condition at Hawke's Bay hospital. Photo / File
A one-month-old baby, who was accidentally given methadone, remains in a stable condition at Hawke's Bay Hospital.
The infant was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) last Tuesday, after reportedly being given methadone by mistake at a Hawke's Bay community pharmacy.
National Poisons Centre director Doctor Adam Pomerleau saidmethadone poisonings were extremely rare in New Zealand.
"We get around 25,000 calls per year about poisonings, but when it comes to methadone, I wouldn't expect the number to be zero, but it might not be much more than that.
"Methadone is a opioid medication and like all other opioid medications, they all produce very similar effects on the body.
"The symptoms of opioid poisoning are pretty recognisable, they include coma, respitory depression and small pupils."
Pomerleau said regardless of age, the effects of methadone can be reversed quickly and easily thanks to a drug called Naloxone.
"It's incredibly effective and every paramedic will carry it on them. Regardless of the dosage of methadone, Naloxone is an incredibly powerful antidote that can reverse the effects of the drug."