52-year-old Connie Sneed is charged with a Level 5 felony for practicing medicine without a license in Indiana. Ms. Sneed, who had been with the nursing home for 15-years, posted a comment on a Facebook page which caused her to be charged criminally. Her comment was, "I just want y'all to know the hardest thing I've ever done in 28 years start a patient on O2 for 4 days 12 LPM. with a non-rebreather mask … I asked him on day 4 if he's tired he said yes I said do you want me to take all this off … [Read more...]
The Tragedy of Substance Abuse and Nursing
In 2020, Donna Monticone worked for Yale Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility Clinic in Orange, Connecticut where she was responsible for ordering and stocking narcotics. She started to use and steal Fentanyl. Initially she would remove the drug from the secured file, inject herself, and then add saline to compensate for the taken volume of Fentanyl. Eventually, she began taking vials to her home where she not only injected herself with the drug but would, as before, replace the taken … [Read more...]
Nursing Boards’ Dirty Little Secrets
I would think with the pandemic and with nurses being the number 1 most trusted profession (and in dire need) that nursing boards would have compassion toward nurses who are asked to work harder with more acute patients and with less staff. These conditions make a recipe for a disciplinary matter before any board. Interestingly, patients’ right to sue for malpractice is curtailed during the pandemic because of the crisis and decreased staff yet nurses can still be reported to the Board with … [Read more...]
Recipe For Disaster: More Patients Per Nurse
California is the only state that has mandatory minimum staffing. However, when the pandemic hit and ICUs were filled to capacity, the state’s Department of Public Health allowed hospitals to apply for a temporary expedited waiver which would allow each nurse to care for more patients. The law had allowed nurses to take only 1 or 2 patients in ICU during the pandemic but now with the introduction of the waiver, nurses must take even more extremely ill patients into their care. This further … [Read more...]
Can You Train A Nurse In 2 Days To Work In ICU?
California Governor Gavin Newsom proposes that nurses be trained in ICU care in just 48 hours. Maybe they can be trained in 2 days but certainly not sufficiently enough to do things safely or within the standard of care. A nurse with only 48 hours of ICU training may end up being more of a danger to a COVID 19 patient than the virus itself. But what difference does that make when hospitals cannot be sued for malpractice involving COVID related cases? I would like to be standing … [Read more...]
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