Tuesday, April 12, 2022

Nursing student with Brittle Bone Disease (OI) and her service dog from CCI will graduate from the University of Tampa

      


Hannah Dineen reported the following for 10Tampa Bay.com:

"Tampa native and University of Tampa nursing student Leigh Dittman is poised to graduate in May with honors. It's a credit to her studiousness and grit, and also to her loyal service dog, Nerf." 

"He is with me every day. He goes with me to every class," said Leigh of Nerf." 

"After sitting through lectures and countless hours of studying at the University of Tampa, Nerf has more than earned the title of "honorary nursing student".

Read more about Leigh and Nerf by clicking the  link below.

Congratulations to both of you!

Donna

https://www.wtsp.com/article/news/education/university-of-tampa-service-dog-honorary-nursing-student/67-ae0b905e-5005-4ca9-a992-88496b96c93f?fbclid=IwAR2Obihp2dXbAyvUIJtLZs9EZrZ5pkaPRxzaGpBEuY4-nJUIpOJiBZO_r94

Tuesday, April 5, 2022

5 Lessons learned from the RaDonda Vaught case from Nurse attorney Lorie Brown

 

Lorie Brown, RN, MN, JD

Nurse attorney, Lorie Brown is the founder of EmpoweredNurses.org. In the following YouTube Channel video, she shares some excellent lessons learned from the RaDonda Vaught case. These lessons apply to all nurses. 

New nurses, veteran nurses, nursing students....we all need to listen! Learn more about insurance and how to protect your freedom and your nursing license by clicking on the link below.

Cheers!

Donna

https://empowerednurses.org/top-5-lessons-learned-from-radonda-vaughts-situation/?fbclid=IwAR3rPNYYeLqC6G4MXEmEYUtU-I5NXgWN0caCxrZ0h4FAgOJcS60w1bqnapQ

Sunday, April 3, 2022

Listen up nurses with disabilities: You could be the next RaDonda Vaught

                                                                           RaDonda Vaught, BSN

By now, most nurses know about the tragic story surrounding RaDonda Vaught, the Tennessee nurse found guilty of criminally negligent homicide in the death of patient. She was criminally prosecuted for a medical error.

Long story short, RaDonda Vaught gave a patient the wrong medication, a human error, and the patient sadly died.

RaDonda came forward and told the truth. Now, she faces three to six years in prison on the gross neglect conviction and one to two years on the criminally negligent homicide conviction. She will be sentenced on May 13, 2022.

Vanderbilt Hospital threw RaDonda under the bus, and she stood alone. This action has outraged many nurses, and some have opted to leave their positions. 

What happened to hospital back up systems that should have prevented this? The hospital had more than a heavy burden of responsibility for the deadly errors, but  charges were only brought against the nurse.

The American Nurses Association stated, 

"Today a jury convicted former Vanderbilt University Medical Center #nurse RaDonda Vaught. We are deeply distressed by this verdict and the harmful ramifications of criminalizing the honest reporting of mistakes. Full Statement: https://bit.ly/3DcNDZG."

This is a sad time and wake up call for all nurses. 

We feel for the patient and the family. They certainly deserve justice, but sending a nurse to jail is not the answer.

Please share your thoughts and respectful comments. RaDonda has handled this with grace and poise. That is the least we can give her now.


Donna