Findings Of Fact The Respondent Mary Ambroz is a registered nurse having been issued license number 129 070-2. Her last known address is 3304 S.W. LeJeune Road, Coral Gables, Florida. At all material times, the Respondent Ambroz was employed as a nurse at Variety Children's Hospital (now known as Miami Children's Hospital), and Mount Sinai Hospital, in Miami, Florida. On or about June 14, 1981, the Respondent Ambroz was working at Mount Sinai Hospital under the supervision of Cindy Shoard, R.N. On that date, an emergency arose with a patient who suffered a lethal arrhythmia which required Shoard and another nurse to begin emergency procedures including starting an IV and placing vital sign monitors on the patient. The Respondent Ambroz entered the room after Shoard had begun emergency treatment and pushed her aside stating that the patient was hers and she would take over. Shoard asked the Respondent to leave the room. The Respondent did not leave and instead picked up drugs which had been placed by Shoard on a table for administration to the patient after the IV procedure, and attempted to administer the drugs herself. Shoard informed the Respondent that the drugs were to be administered in a different manner from the way which she was attempting, and again asked her to leave the room. The Respondent then left the room and the patient was stabilized. On or about July 7, 1981, while employed at Mount Sinai Hospital, the Respondent was absent without leave four days in a row. This incident resulted in her termination of employment from Mount Sinai. Additionally, while still employed at Mount Sinai, the Respondent failed to properly chart physicians' orders concerning medication on four separate occasions and reported to an oncoming nurse, that an IV bag of a patient in her care had been filled when the Respondent had in fact failed to fill the bag. In August of 1982, while employed at Miami Children's Hospital, the Respondent Ambroz was caring for an extremely ill premature infant, K. Kuehnart, who was being treated by endotracheal tube. The Respondent was aware that the infant was classified as "limited touch" due to her serious condition and the risk that movement could kink or dislodge the tube and cause a life-threatening situation. The Respondent handled this infant without adequate justification and after being repeatedly told not to do so by her supervisor, Mary Mulcahy. Moreover, in her care and treatment of baby Keuhnart, the Respondent Ambroz failed to observe basic aseptic techniques including insuring that the inside of the endotracheal tube remained sterile. On August 17, 1982, the Respondent Ambroz, while under the supervision of Andrea Prentiss, R.N., was caring for a premature infant with a tracheal problem which required that the infant be placed on a ventilator. It was extremely important that this infant be handled minimally and carefully so the tube in the infant's throat would not become dislodged. Despite Prentiss' instructions, the Respondent moved the infant in a manner which caused the tube to become dislodged. A neonatologist was present to reinsert the tube and no permanent damage occurred. However, even following this incident, the Respondent handled the infant contrary to Prentiss' instructions. Subsequently, the infant's mother arrived from out-of-town to visit her child. The mother was instructed to wash her hands and put on a surgical gown before entering her child's room. When the mother entered the room, the Respondent Ambroz refused to allow the mother to touch her baby, brushed her hand away from the child, and stated that the mother had an infected cuticle. Prentiss examined the mother's hands, saw no evidence of infection, and ordered the Respondent to allow the mother to touch her child. Also, during this visit, the Respondent requested that the mother change her child's socks since they were, in her opinion, an ugly shade of green. These incidents upset the baby's mother and resulted in her requesting that Prentiss prohibit the Respondent Ambroz from caring for her baby. The actions of the Respondent Ambroz, while employed at Mount Sinai and Miami Children's Hospital, departed from, or failed to conform to, acceptable and prevailing minimal standards of nursing practice.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is RECOMMENDED: That the Board of Nursing enter a Final Order revoking the nursing license of the Respondent Mary Ambroz. DONE and ENTERED this 17th day of October, 1983, in Tallahassee, Florida. SHARYN L. SMITH, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 17th day of October, 1983.
The Issue The issues are whether Respondent violated Section 464.018(1)(h), Florida Statutes, and Rules 64B9-8.005(2) and 64B9-8.005(12), Florida Administrative Code, and if so, what penalty should be imposed.
Findings Of Fact Petitioner is the agency charged with the regulatory and prosecutorial duties related to nursing practice in Florida. Respondent is a licensed practical nurse in Florida, holding license no. PN 0481631. From May 13, 1992, to April 11, 1997, she was employed by Southlake Nursing and Rehabilitation Center (Southlake). On April 9, 1997, Respondent worked as a nurse on the 3:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. shift on Southlake's A wing. T.C. was a patient of another nurse on that wing. Around 7:00 p.m., Respondent began administering medications to her patients. Melody Perez, the ward clerk, informed Respondent that T.C. needed assistance because he was in respiratory distress. T.C. was sitting in the hall, six to eight feet from Respondent. Respondent went over to T.C., checked to make sure that there was oxygen in his tank and that his nasal cannula was in place. Respondent saw no outward symptoms of T.C. being in acute respiratory distress such as rapid breathing or anxiety. Respondent told Ms. Perez that she could not help T.C. because he was not her patient. She told T.C. that his nurse, who was on break and had the keys to the other medication cart, would be back in a few minutes. Respondent thought that T.C. just wanted his medications. She did not perform a nursing assessment, as that term is commonly understood in the practice of nursing. She did not take T.C.'s vital signs, count his respirations, or listen to his chest. After telling him to wait for his nurse, she just walked away. On April 10, 1997, T.C. and another resident complained to Southlake's administrative staff about Respondent's failure to help T.C. Southlake initiated an investigation based on these complaints. Conchita Griffin, Southlake's Assistant Director of Nursing, conducted the investigation. As was the custom and procedure at Southlake, Ms. Griffin interviewed T.C., the second complaining resident, Ms. Perez, and two certified nursing assistants (CNAs) who were on duty during the incident. Ms. Griffin then compiled a written report of the incident and submitted it to Southlake's administration. Based on her investigation, and after considering Respondent's disciplinary history at Southlake, Ms. Griffin recommended that Southlake terminate Respondent. Southlake had written policies requiring a nurse to attend to any resident who needed help. The policies require a nurse to assess a patient complaining of respiratory distress by taking the patient's vital signs, listening to respirations and to the chest for congestion. According to the policies, a nurse should attend to any patient in distress, calling the patient's assigned nurse, facility management, or 911 if needed. There are no circumstances where the nurse should do nothing. On April 11, 1997, Respondent was called in and asked about her side of the incident. She admitted that she looked at T.C. and that he did not appear to be in distress. She acknowledged that she did nothing except tell T.C. that his nurse would be back soon. When informed that she was being terminated, Respondent refused to sign the disciplinary form. She was asked to leave the premises immediately. Sharon Wards-Brown, Southlake's nursing supervisor for the evening shift in question, accompanied Respondent to A wing to retrieve her belongings. When Respondent arrived on the A wing, she went into the medication room, picked up T.C.'s chart, removed some pages from the chart, and went to the fax machine just outside the medication room. Ms. Wards-Brown and Beverly Burstell, the nurse manager who was on the floor checking some charts, saw Respondent remove the pages from T.C.'s chart and go to the fax machine. Both of them told Respondent that she could not remove or copy anything from the resident's chart. Respondent told Ms. Wards-Brown and Ms. Burstell not to touch her. Each page of nurses' notes in the patients' charts have a front and back side. Respondent stood at the fax machine for only a couple of seconds, not long enough to copy both sides of one page of nurses' notes. She certainly did not have time to copy both sides of all of the pages that she had removed from T.C.'s chart. Respondent's testimony that she had time to copy some of the nurses' notes from T.C.'s chart is not persuasive. Her testimony that she left all of the original pages in the fax machine is not credible. After being prevented from copying all of the pages that she had removed from T.C.'s chart, Respondent ran into the bathroom. A few seconds later she came out of the bathroom with papers and her purse in her hand. Ms. Wards-Brown called Clara Corcoran, Southlake's administrator, and Ms. Griffen for assistance. All three of them followed Respondent out of the building, demanding that she return the documents that she had removed from T.C.'s chart. Respondent repeatedly told them not to touch her. Ms. Corcoran and Ms. Griffen followed Respondent into the parking lot. Respondent got in her car but Ms. Corcoran and Ms. Griffen blocked Respondent from closing the car door and continued to demand the return of the papers. Respondent finally drove forward over the cement bumper and the grass in order to leave with the papers. Meanwhile, Ms. Wards-Brown returned to the A wing to examine T.C.'s chart. Ms. Griffen also examined the chart within two to three minutes after Respondent left the floor. The chart was still open on the desk. Ms. Wards-Brown and Ms. Griffen discovered that T.C.'s nurses' notes for April 9, 1997, were missing. They knew the notes were missing because both of them had seen the notes in the chart the day before when they reviewed the chart as part of the investigation. Respondent's Exhibit 2 is a copy of the front and back of one page of T.C.'s nurses' notes. The last note is dated March 27, 1997. It is not plausible that T.C.'s chart had no nurses' notes from that time until after April 10, 1997. Even if Respondent did not remove any of T.C.'s original nurses' notes from the premises, she violated the acceptable standards of nursing care by copying the front and back of one page and removing the copies from the facility.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED: That Petitioner enter a final order fining Respondent $1,000 and suspending her license for one year, followed by two years of probation with appropriate conditions. DONE AND ENTERED this 10th day of October, 2000, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. SUZANNE F. HOOD Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 10th day of October, 2000. COPIES FURNISHED: Diane K. Kiesling, Esquire Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive Building 3, Room 3231A Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Thomas A. Delegal, III, Esquire Randy Rogers, Esquire Delegal & Merritt, P.A. 424 East Monroe Street Jacksonville, Florida 32202-2837 Ruth R. Stiehl, Ph.D., R.N. Executive Director Board of Nursing Department of Health 4080 Woodcock Drive, Suite 202 Jacksonville, Florida 32207-2714 Theodore M. Henderson, Agency Clerk Department of Health 4052 Bald Cypress Way, Bin A00 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1701 William W. Large, General Counsel Department of Health 4042 Bald Cypress Way, Bin A02 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1701
Findings Of Fact Based on the admissions of the parties, on the exhibits received in evidence and on the testimony of the witnesses at the hearing, I make the following findings of fact. Respondent, Kimberly Bauzon, L.P.N., is a licensed practical nurse in the state of Florida, having been issued license number PN 0803361. Respondent has been so licensed at all times material to the allegations in the complaint. Between the dates of October 25, 1985, and December 2, 1985, the Respondent was employed as an LPN by the Care Unit of Jacksonville Beach. On various occasions during her employment as an LPN at the Care Unit of Jacksonville Beach, Respondent charted vital signs for patients that she had not, in fact, taken. On or about November 21, 1985, while employed as an LPN on duty at the Care Unit of Jacksonville Beach, without authority or authorization, Respondent left her unit within the Care Unit for at least thirty (30) minutes. During that period of at least thirty (30) minutes on November 21, 1985, during which Respondent was out of her unit, there was no nurse present in the unit to take care of patient needs. Also on or about November 21, 1985, while on duty at the Care Unit of Jacksonville Beach, Respondent was asleep for a period of at least two (2) hours. On one occasion during Respondent's employment at the Care Unit of Jacksonville Beach, Respondent pulled a male adolescent by the waistband at the front of his trousers in the course of directing the patient to provide a urine specimen. The manner in which Respondent pulled on the patient's clothing was inappropriate and unprofessional. It is unprofessional conduct and a departure from minimal standards of acceptable and prevailing nursing practice for an LPN to be asleep while on duty. It is unprofessional conduct and a departure from minimal standards of acceptable and prevailing nursing practice for an LPN to chart vital signs which she has not, in fact, taken. It is unprofessional conduct and a departure from minimal standards of acceptable and prevailing nursing practice for an LPN to leave her unit for a period of thirty (30) minutes in the absence of a replacement nurse.
Recommendation In view of all of the foregoing, it is recommended that the Board of Nursing enter a final order in this case finding the Respondent guilty of one incident of violation of Section 464.018(1)(d), Florida Statutes, and four incidents of violation of Section 464.018(1)(f), Florida Statutes. And in view of the provisions of Rule 210-10.05(4)(d), Florida Administrative Code, it is recommended that the Board of Nursing impose a penalty consisting of a letter of reprimand and further consisting of a requirement that Respondent attend required specific continuing education courses, with an emphasis on the legal responsibilities of a nurse to the patients under her care. DONE AND ORDERED this 19th day of March, 1987, at Tallahassee, Florida. M. M. PARRISH Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 19th day of March, 1987. COPIES FURNISHED: Lisa Bassett, Esquire Staff Attorney Department of Professional Regulation 130 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0750 Kimberly Bauzon, LPN 2968 Songbird Trail Atlantic Beach, Florida 32233 Kimberly Bauzon, LPN 216B Seagate Avenue, #B Neptune Beach, Florida 32233 Joe Sole, General Counsel Department of Professional Regulation 130 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0750 Van Poole, Secretary Department of Professional Regulation 130 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0750 Judie Ritter, Executive Director Board of Nursing Department of Professional Regulation Room 504, 111 East Coastline Drive Jacksonville, Florida 32201 =================================================================
The Issue The issue is whether Respondent's license to practice nursing should be revoked, suspended, or otherwise disciplined under the facts and circumstances of this case.
Findings Of Fact Upon consideration of the oral and documentary evidence adduced at the hearing, the following relevant findings of fact are made: At all times material to this proceeding, Respondent Rita Flint (Flint) was a licensed practical nurse in the State of Florida, holding license number PN0655201. Flint's last known address is 6494 South West 8th Place, North Lauderdale, Florida 33068. At all times material to this proceeding Flint was employed by North Broward Medical Center (NBMC) located in Pompano Beach, Florida, as a practical nurse. On August 3, 1990, Flint was assigned to care for patients J. C. and J. K. including administering their medications and charting same on their Medication Administration Record (MAR). On August 3, 1990, J. C.'s physician prescribed one (1) nitroglycerine patch each day. Flint failed to administer the patch on this date. On August 3, 1990, J. C.'s physician prescribed 100 mg. of Norpace every six (6) hours. Flint failed to administer the 2:00 p.m. dosage of Norpace to J. C. On August 3, 1990, J. C.'s physician prescribed 120 mg. of Inderal each day. Flint failed to administer the 9:00 a.m. dosage of Inderal until 1:30 p.m. without noting any explanation on J. C.'s MAR. On August 3, 1990, Flint failed to document the administration of J. K's own medications on the MAR. On August 3, 1990, Flint failed to sign the MARs for J. C. and J. K. as required by hospital policy. On August 15, 1990, Flint left an intravenous bag with an exposed needle hanging at the bedside of a patient. On August 29, 1990, Flint was assigned to care for patient R. R. including administering his medications. Flint failed to administer the following medications leaving all of them at R. R.'s bedside: (a) Timolo (9:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. doses); (b) Mixide (9:00 a.m. dose); (c) Zantac (9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. doses); (d) Lasix (9:00 a.m. dose); and, (e) Entozyme (8:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon doses). On August 30, 1990, NBMC terminated Flint's employment as a result of the aforementioned conduct. There is no evidence that any patient suffered any actual harm as a result of Flint's errors. In September of 1990, NBMC referred Flint to the Intervention Project for Nurses. At all times relevant to this proceeding, Flint's job performance was adversely affected by long work schedules necessitated by severe financial problems. During the week of August 3, 1990, Flint worked a ninety-two-hour week. The acute financial stress was due to domestic problems including the breakup of her twenty-two-year-old marriage. Flint had no problems involving substance abuse. Flint attended individual therapy sessions with a clinical psychologist, Priscilla Marotta, Ph.D., and participated in group therapy designed primarily for persons with substance abuse problems. Flint attended weekly therapy sessions for approximately one month after which she could no longer afford treatment. Even though Flint was financially unable to continue treatment with Dr. Marotta or any other counseling program recommended by the Intervention Program for Nurses, she diligently undertook a self-help program to educate herself on stress management techniques, to develop self-reliance, and to improve self-esteem. Flint's effort to participate in therapy, to the extent financially possible, and to rehabilitate herself shows a strong commitment to her profession. Flint has been licensed to practice nursing since May 31, 1982. There is no evidence of any disciplinary action against her license prior to or after the incidents herein described. Flint is currently employed as a nurse in a hospice. Her recent performance appraisal reports indicate that, on an average, she fully meets all job requirements.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is, therefore recommended that the Board of Nursing enter a Final Order finding Respondent guilty of violating Section 464.018(h), Florida Statutes (1989), as defined in Rule 210-10.005(1)(e)1 and Rule 210-10.005(1)(e)2, Florida Administrative Code, and not guilty of violating Section 464.018(1)(j), Florida Statutes. It is further recommended that the Board's final order: (1) place the Respondent on probation for one year subject to such requirements as the Board may require; and (2) require the Respondent to pay an administrative fine in the amount of two hundred fifty dollars ($250). DONE AND ENTERED in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, this 21st day of November 1994. SUZANNE F. HOOD, Hearing Officer Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 21st day of November 1994. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER IN CASE NO. 93-2715 The following constitutes my specific rulings pursuant to Section 120.59(2), Florida Statutes, on all of the Proposed Findings of Fact submitted by the parties to this case. FOR THE PETITIONER: Incorporated into Findings of Fact 1. Incorporated into Findings of Fact 2 and 11. Incorporated into Findings of Fact 4. Incorporated into Findings of Fact 5. Incorporated into Findings of Fact 6. Incorporated into Findings of Fact 7. Incorporated into Findings of Fact 8. Incorporated into Findings of Fact 9. Incorporated into Findings of Fact 10. The first sentence is incorporated into Findings of Fact 13. The remaining portion of this proposed fact is not supported by competent substantial evidence. Furthermore, Respondent's Exhibit 3, as it relates to a diagnosis of a mental condition, is hearsay which does not supplement or explain any other psychological or medical evidence. Thus, any reference in Exhibit R3 to a generalized anxiety disorder is insufficient to support Petitioner's proposed finding. Unsupported by competent substantial evidence. Unsupported by competent substantial evidence. See number 10 above. FOR THE RESPONDENT: 1. Respondent did file proposed findings of fact or conclusions of law. COPIES FURNISHED: Laura Gaffney, Esquire Natalie Duguid, Esquire Agency for Health Care Administration 1940 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0792 Rita Flint 3313 South East Second Street Pompano, Florida 33063 Judie Ritter Executive Director Board of Nursing AHCA 504 Daniel Building 111 East Coastline Drive Jacksonville, Florida 32202 Harold D. Lewis General Counsel The Atrium, Suite 301 325 John Knox Road Tallahassee, Florida 32303
Findings Of Fact At all times pertinent to the issues contained herein, Respondent. ROYCE S. McCALL, was licensed by the State of Florida as a licensed practical nurse, the license initially issued on December 4, 1978 and renewed thereafter until the present. His license number is 0500981. On July 11, 1984, Respondent was employed as a licensed practical nurse with the Walton County Convalescent Center (WCCC) in DeFuniak Springs, Florida. Late that evening, at approximately 4 or 5 a.m., Respondent, as charge nurse on one of the Center's units, along with Rachiel Infinger and Corene Fondren, was about to change a bladder catheter on one of the Center's residents, a Mrs. Rourke. Before doing so, however, he discovered that Mrs. Rourke had fouled herself and he refused to do the procedure then instructing Mrs. Rourke's aides to clean her up. He then went to the room occupied by Mrs. Harper, an elderly, completely bedridden patient between 80 and 90 years old, who rarely talks and can hardly move her arms and legs. Mrs. Harper also required a bladder catheter change and Respondent, along with another nurse, was attempting to do it. Since apparently Mrs. Harper was resisting somewhat, Respondent asked Ms. Infinger to help. During the course of the procedure, Mrs. Harper brought her hand down into the area where Respondent was working in an attempt to stop him. It was obvious that the procedure was somewhat painful to her and in the opinion of Ms. Infinger, Respondent was being less than gentle. When Mrs. Harper brought her hand down, Respondent grabbed it and moved it out of the way telling her at the time to, "Move your damned hand." This comment was heard by both Ms. Infinger and Ms. Fondren. When Respondent moved Mrs. Harper's hand, it collided with the bed rail which broke the skin causing it to bleed. Ms. Infinger noticed this and mentioned it to Respondent. He said he would take care of it and Ms. Infinger went some place else to do something. When she came back some 30 to 45 minutes later, she found that Respondent had still not dressed the skin break on Mrs. Harper's hand. Ms. Infinger thinks Respondent was too rough with Mrs. Harper. She believes it was not necessary for him to throw the elderly woman's hand off as he did. There were two aides present who could have, had they been asked, moved the hand and held it out of the way. There is some divergence in the testimony of Ms. Infinger and Ms. Fondren as to whether Respondent threw Mrs. Harper's hand or pushed it with the former contending it was a throw and the latter contending it was merely a push. Even Ms. Fondren, however, who believes this rough action was a reflex action by Respondent who had been in a bad mood all evening, agrees that since someone was there to help him, he should have asked for help rather than reacting on his own. If either witness is to be believed, however, Respondent acted unprofessionally. On the other hand, however, Ms. Stubbs, Ms. Blocker, and Ms. Fields, all of whom had worked with Respondent for several months, knew him from their repeated observations of him at work never to be abusive or rough with his patients. He is generally very kind to his patients, taking the time to explain what he is doing and exhibiting patience and understanding. His patience is somewhat less with the aides who in his opinion, do not do what they should on duty. Mrs. Harper has had several other skin tears both before and after the one in issue here. She is an old woman who bruises easily and whose skin can be broken easily. While not a difficult patient, she is somewhat confused and tends to try to interfere at times with the ministrations of those trying to help her and her hands often get in the way. Here, it is obvious that Respondent was in a bad mood late at night when he went to treat Mrs. Harper. He had just come from another patient who had not been properly cared for by the aides responsible for her and he was clearly annoyed. No doubt Mrs. Harper, not through spite or even consciously, attempted to stop him from doing what was no doubt a painful procedure and he reacted unprofessionally. This is not to say he consciously intended to harm her, but his reaction was less than it should have been in this situation. When Ms. Infinger came back and found that Respondent had not tended to Mrs. Harpers wound, she immediately reported this fact to Barbara Jean Miller, a licensed practical nurse working on another unit that evening who quickly treated and dressed the skin tear. When she left duty the next morning, she reported what she had seen and done and what Ms. Infinger had told her to the Assistant Director of Nursing who she saw outside in the parking lot. This lady reported it to the Director of Nursing, Mrs. Harwell, who conducted her own investigation. Mrs. Harwell interviewed Respondent who after first denying that the incident had taken place, admitted that he did yank Mrs. Harper's arm but stated he did not know it had hit the bed rail. He also initially denied knowing there was an injury but then admitted he had been told there was and that he had said he would fix it. He admitted that he was upset that evening. In the catheter procedure that Respondent was accomplishing, it is never appropriate to handle a patient so forcefully that it results in an injury even though it may be necessary to restrain or move the patient in some fashion. In Mrs. Harwell's opinion, Respondent's handling of Mrs. Harper in this instance was below minimum standards for the nursing profession. After talking with all the witnesses and securing pictures of the injury, based on her investigation and her discussions with Respondent, she terminated his employment with WCCC that day not only because in this instance his performance was below standards and unprofessional but also because this was the second incident of substandard performance on his record. She had previously chastised him for speaking improperly to or about another patient several weeks previously. Consequently, it is clear that Respondent moved Mrs. Harper's hand in such a manner that resulted in injury to her which is unprofessional conduct on his part compounded by his failure to return to treat the wound once he was made aware of it.
Findings Of Fact The Respondent, Jo Ann Murphy, is a licensed registered nurse in the State of Florida, holding license number 69367-2. The Respondent received her nursing education and training in Albany, Georgia, and became a registered nurse in Florida in 1973. In 1977 she became certified by the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology as a nurse clinician. In 1981 she was certified as a clinical nurse practitioner in ambulatory gynecology and obstetric care. Until 1979, the Respondent was head nurse of OB/GYN Labor and Delivery, Postpartum Unit, at West Florida Hospital in Pensacola. From 1979 to 1983 she was office nurse and nurse practitioner in the office of Thomas H. Wyatt, M.D., in Pensacola. The Respondent became employed at University Hospital in Pensacola on April 25, 1983, primarily because of her knowledge in the field of Caesarian Sections. She was terminated less than one month later, on May 23, 1983, while still in her probationary period, for unsatisfactory nursing performance. On May 18, 1983, another registered nurse on the morning shift with the Respondent, testified that she smelled alcohol on the Respondent's breath at 7:30 A.M. Although this witness worked with the Respondent each day, this is the only time she contends that she smelled alcohol on her breath, and this witness did not see the Respondent stagger or exhibit any other symptom of alcohol use. This witness testified that the Respondent showed a lack of initiative, but that when the Respondent was told to do something she would do it well, and that she never had any concern regarding the Respondent's ability to function as a nurse. Two other hospital employees, a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) and a nurses aide, testified that they smelled alcohol on the Respondent's breath on a date unknown. The nurses aide, however, never saw the Respondent stagger, or exhibit any other sign of intoxication, and she says she only smelled alcohol on the Respondent's breath on one occasion. The LPN testified that she also saw the Respondent sitting at her desk in a daze or stupor, but this symptom was not observed or described by any other witness. Both of these witnesses worked with the Respondent each day, but only claimed to have smelled alcohol on her breath on one occasion. The Respondent denied having any alcohol to drink on or before any shift that she worked while employed at University Hospital. Her husband and her daughter confirmed that the Respondent had not consumed alcohol on the morning of May 18, 1983, before going to work. Another witness, a physician who was in the residency program at University Hospital while the Respondent worked there, had the opportunity to work in close contact with the Respondent on five or six occasions in the labor and delivery suite, and never smelled alcohol on her breath, or saw her stagger or exhibit any other sign of intoxication. This doctor found her to be alert, she performed her functions with no problems, and he had no complaints with her. The nursing director at University Hospital, who conducted the termination interview of the Respondent, observed what she characterized as red, blotchy skim on the Respondent, and the Respondent appeared to be nervous. However, this witness did not smell alcohol on the Respondent's breath, and she saw no other symptoms of alcohol use. Both the Respondent and the physician who employed her for four years confirmed the Respondent's skin blotches, but this is an inherited tendency having nothing to do with medical problems or alcohol use. The nursing director and the patient care coordinator both testified that the Respondent stated at her termination interview that she used to have an alcohol problem, but that she had been rehabilitated. The Respondent denies having made such a statement. Another physician, in addition to the one mentioned in paragraph 7 above, who was in labor and delivery with the Respondent more than ten times, and probably every day she worked at University Hospital, did not smell alcohol on her breath although they worked together closely. This witness found the Respondent's nursing abilities to be competent and very professional. Likewise, the physician who employed the Respondent for four years had no problems with her or her work, he found her prompt and attentive in her duties, and an excellent nurse. On another occasion, not specifically dated, but separate from the instances of the alleged alcohol breath, the Respondent is charged with having "defied an order to stay with a critically ill patient". The evidence is completely devoid of any explicit order given to the Respondent to stay with any patient during the time she worked at University Hospital. Instead, it is contended that the Respondent violated what are characterized as "standing orders" that a nurse should not leave a patient who has been assigned to her. These "standing orders" are supposed to have been set forth in policy manuals given to employees of the hospital, but no such manual was offered in evidence; nor was the nature of the "standing orders" explicitly described by the witnesses. On the one occasion when the Respondent is charged with defying orders to stay with a patient, the patient was being attended also by an LPN when the Respondent left to telephone the patient's physician. In the same general area, but behind the curtains of an adjoining cubicle, another registered nurse was attending a patient there. The patient whom the Respondent and the LPN attended went into deceleration after the Respondent had left to telephone her physician. The LPN needed help with the oxygen and to turn the patient. The other registered nurse in the adjoining cubicle came in and the patient was stabilized. The Respondent returned in a few minutes. It is below minimum standards of acceptable and prevailing nursing practice for a registered nurse to leave a patient, whose condition is considered critical, in the care of an LPN. Yet the patient was not in critical condition when the Respondent left to call the physician, and there was another registered nurse in close proximity who responded when the need for her arose. Thus, there is not sufficient competent evidence to support a finding of fact (1) that the Respondent either had alcohol on her breath or was in a drunken condition while on duty; (2) that the Respondent defied an order to stay with a critically ill patient; or (3) that the Respondent left a patient whose condition is considered critical in the care of an LPN. The competent evidence in the record supports a finding of fact (1) that the Respondent did not have alcohol on her breath at any time while employed at University Hospital; (2) that the Respondent did not defy an order to stay with a critically ill patient; and (3) that the Respondent did not leave a patient whose condition is considered critical in the care of an LPN.
Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Administrative Complaint against the Respondent, Jo Ann Murphy, be dismissed. THIS RECOMMENDED ORDER entered this 10th day of January, 1985, in Tallahassee, Florida. WILLIAM B. THOMAS Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 10th day of January, 1985. COPIES FURNISHED: Julia P. Forrester, Esquire 130 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Thomas C. Staples, Esquire P. O. Box 12786 Pensacola, Florida 32575 Ms. Helen P. Keefe Executive Director, Board of Nursing Department of Professional Regulation Room 504, 111 East Coastline Drive Jacksonville, Florida 32202 Mr. Fred Roche Secretary Department of Professional Regulation 130 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301
Findings Of Fact Respondent, Ann Claycomb (Claycomb), was at all times material hereto a licensed practical nurse in the State of Florida, having been issued license number 39853-1. On December 24, 1987, Claycomb was employed as an agency nurse by Alpha Health Care, Inc., and was on assignment to Health South Rehabilitation, a skilled nursing and rehabilitation facility in Miami, Florida. While at the facility on that date, Claycomb worked the morning shift 7:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., and was assigned to the skilled nursing floor. The skilled nursing floor contained 20-25 elderly, though mostly alert patients. At the commencement of Claycomb's shift, it was her responsibility to administer medications to these patients which conformed with that prescribed by their medication administration record (MAR). Shortly after Claycomb began her rounds, Elaine Wood, the Unit Manager at Health South Rehabilitation, began to receive complaints from patients for what they perceived to be errors in the medicinal drugs administered or attempted to be administered to them by Claycomb. Upon investigation, the following medication errors were discovered. Claycomb administered what she believed to be two Tylenol tablets to patient H.B. Following administration, the patient became lethargic and her vital signs deteriorated but later returned to normal. Lethargy is not a side effect of Tylenol. Although the MAR prescribed two Slow K tablets at 9:00 a.m., and Lilbrax as needed, Claycomb recorded having administered one Slow K tablet and Atarax to patient H.R. Claycomb dispensed Atarax to patient A.J. at 9:00 a.m. when the MAR prescribed dose to be given at 1:00 p.m. Patient refused medication because given at the wrong time. In committing the foregoing medication errors Claycomb's practice fell below the minimal standards of acceptable and prevailing nursing practice in the administration of medicinal drugs. Verification of other complaints received by Ms. Wood could not be verified because, contrary to accepted and prevailing nursing practice, Claycomb did not annotate some patients' MAR upon dispensing medications.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is RECOMMENDED that a final order be entered suspending the license of respondent, Ann Claycomb, until such time as she submits proof satisfactory to the Board of Nursing that she can practice nursing safely. DONE AND ENTERED in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, this 27th day of December, 1988. WILLIAM J. KENDRICK Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 27th day of December, 1988. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE NO. 88-3603 Petitioner's proposed findings of fact are addressed as follows: 1. Addressed in paragraph 1. 2-4. Addressed in paragraphs 2 and 3. 5 & 6. Addressed in paragraphs 46. Addressed in paragraph 4c. Subordinate or not necessary to result reached. Not necessary to result reached. Not necessary to result reached. To the extent supported by competent proof addressed in paragraph 4. Proposed findings 11a and 11d are based on hearsay which does not supplement or explain any competent proof. 12-15. Not pertinent nor necessary to result reached. COPIES FURNISHED: Michael A. Mone', Esquire Department of Professional Regulation 130 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0750 Ms. Ann Claycomb 4175 South West 98th Avenue Miami, Florida 33165 Lawrence M. Shoot, Esquire 6011 West 16th Avenue Hialeah, Florida 33012 Judie Ritter, Executive Director Board of Nursing 504 Daniel Building 111 East Coastline Drive Jacksonville, Florida 32201 Bruce D. Lamb, Esquire General Counsel Department of Professional Regulation 130 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0750
Findings Of Fact Respondent B. Delores Lane Eckard holds a Florida license as a registered nurse, No. 1091372. She has been so licensed since September 10, 1979. Petitioner's Exhibit No. 1. Before she was fired in July of 1983, respondent worked twelve-hour night shifts in the surgical intensive nursing unit at Baptist Hospital in Pensacola. A burn victim, Marc MacInvale, was among the patients respondent attended, during the shift that began at seven o'clock on the evening of June 15, 1983. Because of the extent of his burns, Mr. MacInvale had been placed in a private room, and hospital staff observed "reverse isolation" techniques. In or on his nightstand, Ms. Eckard found two, ten milligram ampules of Valium. Knowing that it was against hospital policy for the ampules to be there, she picked them up, intending to return them to the medication cart. She put them in her pocket for safekeeping, while she finished tasks in Mr. MacInvale's room. After she got home from work, on the morning of June 16, 1983, she undressed and went to bed. When she awoke and gathered up her clothes for washing, she discovered that the ampules were still in the pocket of her uniform. She was aware that a nurse had been fired two weeks earlier when Valium had been discovered in her locker at Baptist Hospital; and she decided against notifying the hospital or anybody she worked with of the whereabouts of the Valium. Instead, she placed the ampules in a clear plastic bag together with a piece of paper with Marc MacInvale's name on it and put the clear plastic bag in her "work purse," with the intention of returning the Valium to the hospital, when she next went to the hospital. In these circumstances, failure to report promptly that she had removed a patient's medicine from his room and that he did not receive it fell below minimal standards of acceptable and prevailing nursing practice, according to uncontroverted testimony. The clear plastic bag with the ampules and the piece of paper with "Marc MacInvale" written on it were still in Ms. Eckard's purse when she was arrested in the early morning hours of June 17, 1983, for driving under the influence of intoxicants. Celebrating with friends at a restaurant in anticipation of her June 18 birthday, she had drunk two glasses of wine and a "brandy manhattan," but had ingested no other intoxicating substances, before setting out for home. After her arrest, she demonstrated poor coordination and balance, slurred speech and difficulty in understanding. After twice registering less, the breathalyzer registered 1.0. Formal charges were apparently filed, and, on October 19, 1983, respondent pleaded nolo contendere. Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2. The police examined the contents of respondent's purse on June 17, 1983, and an assistant state's attorney eventually inquired of William Allen Foster, Baptist Hospital's director of security, whether Valium had been prescribed for Marc MacInvale. Norma Jean Vaughan, respondent's supervisor, confronted her, after she learned that Ms. Eckard had been arrested with Valium in her purse. Respondent volunteered blood and urine samples for analysis. The results of analysis were negative, but Baptist Hospital terminated her employment nevertheless. At the time, things were not going well on the domestic front, either. Ms. Eckard's husband had beaten her, and they were separated. In despair, she recorded the following: "Begin a good-bye tape. Um, I don't want anybody feeling sorry for me. I just want everyone to know why - I never thought that I would come to this point in my life. Cir- cumstances have, uh, made it so that I have, and the decision has been made and is irrevocable. In my forty-three years, I've spent the first (voice shaky, clearing throat) well, five years, with a divorced mother. Then, I spent until I was eleven in an orphanage. This taught me a lot of compassion, if, nothing more. Through my teen years, I had various stepfathers; many were - had means and, uh, were very good to me. I married young and was very happy - raised three chil, well, two children, and, uh, thought I did a decent job. Thought our marriage was well organized and pretty happy, overall. We had everything under control. We saved our money. We made good investments. Everything was going our way. I decided after the children were grown that I wanted to be a nurse. I could do what I wanted to do now. My job with the children was over as far as their, their primary needs were concerned. They had other interests in their lives, and I accepted my displacement. I went to nursing school and, uh, worked very hard to make the grades that I did. I went far and beyond what I had to do to advance my knowledge in medicine and to prepare myself to be the best nurse that I could be. I've worked five years in nursing and, uh, even though I worked Surgical Floor, many people feel like all you do is change bandages, do your job and that's it. The emotional needs of the patient are completely ignored. They hurt, you give them pain meds or you tell them, 'That's too bad; you can't have any pain medicine for another so many hours. And then, that's it. There's no, there's no, uh, efforts to make them more comfortable during that waiting period where they, where they're suffering so much. Or maybe they feel that nobody loves them. Nobody cares. They feel the isolation (pause) the, like no one's with them. They're in an alien environment. A lot of this is ignored by a lot of nurses. I was in reverse isolation when I was burned, and I spent three months in a wheelchair. I know what it is to be alone in an isolation room and, uh, the nurses saying, 'Oh, my God, do I have to dress that again?'. You know. Nobody, it's not a very pleasant thing, but I know the feeling of isolation. I know the feeling of not feeling wanted even though you are. Uh, and I've tried to take, in my nursing, the total body into, to mind to try to fill the needs of the total person, not just the colostomy. It's not a colostomy patient. It's not, it's not a cardiac, and uh, and uh, an abdominal mass, a tumor or whatever. It's a person to me. The compassion that my patients and the families feel that I've afforded has been given freely because I do care about that person as a human being. I have found though (choked up - brief pause - then voice somewhat shaky), now that my life has essentially fallen apart. The marriage that I thought would last forever, you know. Now, we're in our middle years and the kids are grown and we're making good money and we can afford nice things, uh, we can have a nice bank account. We can go places and do things, but then you find that this doesn't happen - that somewhere along the, that time of getting there, that you've lost what originally drew you together. Those dreams of making it there. You've made it. Where is there to go? (Big sigh.) I guess, and with my husband's illness, he can't help, I guess, what he said to me. I never thought anyone would want to hurt me. I've been fairly well protected all my life. I'm not a worldly person as far as the streets are concerned or, or what goes on in this world. I'm well versed in politics and, and in things like that, but my world consists of my work and my home. Now, I come home to an empty house, and I have no goal as far as nursing is concerned. That's been taken away from me also. So - and I feel sort of deserted because, with the exceptions that I've made for other people and for the hospital, things that, things that I would like to change that, that bother me have never been changed and never will be. Those are accepted. Uh, doctors that harm my patients - that has had to be accepted - reported and nothing really accomplished by it. That person is still there. (Click. Recorder apparently turned off and then back on. Clearing throat and then continuing in a somewhat deeper tone of voice.) Yet, when I, as a nurse, inadvertently make an error without malice or without forethought, and with every intention of correcting my error, my only thought was protecting my job - a job that I love dearly, that I was afraid of losing. This was the only reason it wasn't reported to you by myself. Then, I am terminated. And the only other reason for my existence is taken away from me. This is not to make you feel guilty. I know you have your job to do. I know there have been exceptions made. I know of one girl in particular where her whole life was a damn exception, and she has actually come close to killing patients, and it could be proven by records, etc. by actual observations. And yet, she's welcomed with open arms when she comes back. She left in a world of glory. It's as one of our other nurses said, 'She could fall in a bucket of (pause) and come up smelling like a rose very time.' My assets are frozen now. I have no means of support other than my job. I have no other place I want to go or would go. I've thought it over, and I know where my place in life lies and I know what my future holds. It holds nothing at this point because I can't make that decision to divorce my husband or to have him come back here. Those are my options at this point for survival. Those decisions I cannot make. The decision to work - the only reason I had any medication at all was the fact that I had been beaten half to death, and I was forced to go to Dr. - to the doctor simply as a, because I needed the slip to come back to work. At that point, he saw that I was just falling apart as far as my nerves were concerned, simply because my system couldn't adjust to the beatings that I had, had been inflicted upon me. He suggested that I take something until I got over that hump. I've never taken medication before, and, uh, as I told you, I told him I didn't want anything heavy because my system was just not used to medication and anything that I took, even an aspirin, one aspirin, would cure a headache. So, uh, my system is super sensitive to medication apparently. Therefore, he prescribed what he did and, uh, I took it. It's the lowest dosage he could have give - that he could give me. Uh, he said I could take up to 30 milligrams without any harm. The maximum I took was 10, and this was only, you know, when I was really upset and, or felt that I was not in control. For instance, like when I had to meet with my husband or things like this due to the legal matters, or uh, other business interests that we had that brought us together. I'm not making this tape to defend myself. I don't think any defense really is necessary because I've done nothing really wrong. I made an error in judgement, and I've paid dearly, both financially, emotionally, etc...I've lost everything for one error in judgement. I would hope that this would never happen to anyone else because it leaves you with very few options in your life. So, I appreciate your support as far as your confidence in my nursing care. (Click. Recorder apparently turned off and then back on.) I appreciate the fact that you didn't take my license away. I guess that would have been the ultimate defeat. Um (pause) at this point, as I said, um, I have no options. I feel that you're put on this earth for a purpose. My purpose has ended." She mailed the tape recording to Baptist Hospital where various people listened to it on July 8, 1983. Mr. Foster tried to reach respondent by telephone, but got a busy signal. He then called the police department. Three policemen appeared at her home to find her talking to a friend on the telephone. At least one of the policemen stayed to talk for an hour or two, then left and called Mr. Foster. He told Mr. Foster he did not think that Ms. Eckard "needed to be Baker Acted," but said that he would look in on her again later in the day. On December 4, 1983, Ms. Eckard was arrested a second time for allegedly driving under the influence of alcohol, but the state's attorney's office did not pursue these charges. The arresting officer testified at the hearing in the present case. Neither his testimony that she was driving nor his testimony that she was intoxicated has been credited.