• Video
  • Shop
  • Culture
  • Family
  • Wellness
  • Food
  • Living
  • Style
  • Travel
  • News
  • Book Club
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
  • Your US State Privacy Rights
  • Children's Online Privacy Policy
  • Interest-Based Ads
  • Terms of Use
  • Do Not Sell My Info
  • Contact Us
  • © 2026 ABC News
  • Wellness

Mother Mistakes Ambien for Thyroid Medication

BySUSAN DONALDSON JAMES
May 18, 2010, 9:27 PM

May 19, 2010— -- Nancy Kruger Cohen -- the harried mother of a 5-year-old and an 8-year-old -- begins each day with her gray thyroid tablet, taken on an empty stomach.

But one day, while multi-tasking under pressure -- preparing waffles for breakfast, packing lunchboxes with sandwiches and zipping up winter jackets for the walk to school -- she grabs the wrong prescription bottle.

"As the pill goes in, my tongue pauses -- Is it usually pink? -- but I swallow anyway. And then the mistake is clear," said the New York City writer and art director. "I have taken a sleeping pill at 8:15 a.m."

"The scene freezes: me, staring at the word Ambien, yelling to the girls about boots, running in slow motion to the bathroom," she said. "I used to be able to make myself throw up, but now not even a toothbrush will work, so I give up and unlock the door to find the girls, boots on. We leave."

So begins her day -- one in which she texts her girlfriends, throws up over tea, crashes in bed and eventually spends the evening playing with her children, uncharacteristically oblivious to the mess and confusion. Her memory of the day is, of course, spotty.

Since 2000, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has received more than 95,000 reports of medication errors -- some of them doctor or pharmacy mistakes, but many by consumers themselves.

"Chaos at home is a common denominator in a lot of accidental poisonings," said Marcel J. Casavant, a toxicologist and medical director of the Central Ohio Poison Center at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus.

"Kids may be playing, mom is fixing dinner, dad is getting in from work and grabbing mail or whatever dads do," he said. "But there's a lot going on, and someone decides it's time to administer medication."

At least half of all Americans take at least one prescription drug, with one in six taking three or more medications. The biggest increases in prescriptions were for antidepressants, nonsteriodal anti-inflammatory drugs, and blood sugar and cholesterol lowering drugs, according to a 2004 Department of Health and Human Services report.

Cohen credits a grandmother who is a doctor for the array of sleeping aids in her medicine cabinet: two kinds of Ambien, as well as melatonin, progesterone cream, 5-Hydroxytryptophan and Valium, "for emergencies."

"Everyone's cabinet is unhinging with confusing chemical choices," she writes in a recent essay, "Mothers Little Helper," in the New York Times magazine.

"What happens if you take his Lipitor and he takes her Prozac and she takes their Skelaxin and they take our codeine? Or Desitin becomes toothpaste and mouthwash gets in the neti pot? We're all one misdose away from something."

Casavant said his poison control center, one of three in Ohio, fields at least 100 calls a day, "a couple of dozen" of which are unintentional medication mix-ups. "We have a lot more chemicals and a lot more medicine these days."

A school nurse recently called the poison control center because a teenager thought he might have taken his grandmother's medicine.

"It's not just a mom trying to medicate herself," Casavant said. "Sometimes we have three or four generations of people in the house, with one or more people per generation on various meds. Maybe it's not Mom taking her nighttime med in the morning, but Mom giving one of Grandpa's meds to the girl who's running late on her way to school."

Up Next in Wellness—

Parents of baby boy who was 'born twice' speak out

May 4, 2026

Doctor explains why too much animal protein could be harmful

May 1, 2026

Cancer survivor meets donor who saved her life during Disney World 5K

May 1, 2026

Guitar teacher launches therapy program for Parkinson's patients

April 29, 2026

Shop GMA Favorites

ABC will receive a commission for purchases made through these links.

Sponsored Content by Taboola

The latest lifestyle and entertainment news and inspiration for how to live your best life - all from Good Morning America.
  • Contests
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Do Not Sell My Info
  • Children’s Online Privacy Policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Your US State Privacy Rights
  • Interest-Based Ads
  • About Nielsen Measurement
  • Press
  • Feedback
  • Shop FAQs
  • ABC News
  • ABC
  • All Videos
  • All Topics
  • Sitemap

© 2026 ABC News
  • Privacy Policy— 
  • Your US State Privacy Rights— 
  • Children's Online Privacy Policy— 
  • Interest-Based Ads— 
  • Terms of Use— 
  • Do Not Sell My Info— 
  • Contact Us— 

© 2026 ABC News