about this and needs to fix it. take a listen. they certainly know the information and the opportunity to do it is there. i can t speak to whether they knowingly chose to pick a less secure option. in hindsight, we can say they made a bad decision. a lot of criticism against the tsa. the tsa has been scrambling to defend itself because many are saying they must have known as long as four years ago that a flaw could exist in the bar coding system that exists. tsa spokesman, here is his response. identifies something as a vulnerability to not understand the entire aviation security system because there is not one one hole is not going to bring us down because we have so many other patches. there is no real indication the tsa of how quickly they re working to close this vulnerability, this flaw in the boarding passes.
filled. reporter: the equipment will assemble and mix medicine, which assures the products are just right and limits human exposure to these dangerous medications. through a bar coding system, the hospital will be able to track all these drugs from the time they re manufactured until the time they re administered. no matter what safeguards are put in place, human beings are always going to make mistakes. according to the institute of medicine, there s at least one medication error per day involving patients in hospitals across america. systems like this are designed precisely to eliminate those problems. this system, for instance, would likely have prevented the medical mistake involving the twins of actor dennis quaid. in that mixup, hospital staff in los angeles gave quaid s twins
hospital that needs to be filled. reporter: the equipment will assemble and mix medicine, which assures the products are just right and limits human exposure to these dangerous medications. through a bar coding system, the hospital will be able to track all these drugs from the time they re manufactured until the time they re administered. no matter what safeguards are put in place, human beings are always going to make mistakes. according to the institute of medicine, there s at least one medication error per day involving patients in hospitals across america. systems like this are designed precisely to eliminate those problems. this system, for instance, would likely have prevented the medical mistake involving the twins of actor dennis quaid. in that mixup, hospital staff in los angeles gave quaid s twins massive overdoses of heparin. the problem was blamed, in part,
right, and limits human exposure to dangerous medications. through a bar coding system, the hospital will be able to track all of these drugs from the time they re manufactured until the time they re administered. no matter what safeguards are put in place, human beings are always going to make mistakes. according to the institute of medicine, there s at least one medication error per day involving patients and hospitals across america. systems like this are designed to eliminate those problems. this system would have prevented the near-tragic medical mistake involving the twins of dennis quaid. in the 2007 mix-up, hospital staff at cedar sinai medical center gave quaid s twins massive overdoses of heparin. the problem was blamed on nearly identical packaging for the infant and adult concentrations of the drug. ucsf says through bar code