Posts Tagged hospital

Anyone know the California or federal law regarding storage and access to narcotics in a hospital?

Question by jclockson: Anyone know the California or federal law regarding storage and access to narcotics in a hospital?
I happen to know of a nurse that openly admits she gives the keys to the medication room to unlicensed staff so that they may get ‘other’ items stored in the med-room. I know this is against a few hundred corporate policies, but I need to see if there is a specific law stating that unlicensed staff cannot have unsupervised access to where narcotics are kept.
This is a problem that could potentially cost us our jobs on an upcoming inspection….

Best answer:

Answer by michr
law is not the issue policy is. the nurse is legally responsible for the meds if the nurse gives keys to anyone and something is missing that nurse will be held accountable. report the nurse to the nursing supervisor. this nurse is putting her license at risk as well as her job and could possibly effect the job of others he/she works with. the nurse must inventory and sign for all narcotics under their control at every shift change.
if this nurse did happen to have a “drug problem” and was stealing or failing to properly dispense meds this is an easy way to try and blame someone else. the nurse can now claim she let someone in med room for some other supply and hey stole narcotics. the company would most likely still terminate the nurses employment for failing to follow policy but the nurse just might be able to keep their license.
report the nurse now!!!

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Did sending illegal back home sending him to Guatemala,did the hospital falsely imprisoned him?

STUART — Testimony Wednesday from the Martin Memorial Medical Center nurse who in 2003 accompanied illegal immigrant Louis Jimenez to a medical facility in Guatemala wrapped up a nearly three-week trial as attorneys representing the Stuart hospital rested their case.

Closing arguments are expected to begin at 9 a.m. Thursday.

Jurors in the false imprisonment case listened to nurse Diana Gregory describe the steps she and other Martin Memorial staff took to arrange an international transfer for the severely brain-damaged Jimenez after he’d lived at the hospital for nearly three years, running up $1.5 million in unpaid medical care.

Gregory described photos showing Jimenez as she escorted him July 10, 2003, onto an air ambulance to Guatemala City, then to an orthopedic rehabilitation center that had agreed to accept him as a patient.

She told jurors during the flight, Jimenez — who has the cognitive abilities of a young child — received snacks, drinks, read magazines and had fun looking out the window.

“At any point did he … express that he was upset or sad or frightened in any way?” hospital attorney Scott Michaud asked.

“No sir,” Gregory replied, “The plane ride was a great adventure.”

She noted that at the rehab center, Jimenez busied himself talking to those around him, showing off his toy cat.

After his repatriation, Jimenez and his Indiantown guardian sued Martin Memorial, claiming that by sending him to Guatemala, the hospital falsely imprisoned him despite a court order permitting the transfer.

Jimenez’s attorneys at trial have argued the hospital’s actions were unreasonable and unwarranted, in part because during a 2003 guardianship hearing, evidence was presented showing Guatemala lacked the facilities to treat his traumatic brain injury, and that a state probate judge lacked the jurisdiction to order him extradited to a foreign country.

http://www.tcpalm.com/news/2009/jul/22/nurse-describes-trip-to-guatemala-with-brain/

Caroloft… stop answering something that causes you hardship.This a question and answer not a complaint board

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