Is Nurse Who Caused Excruciating Death of a Patient a Victim? | RaDonda Vaught Case Analysis

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 เม.ย. 2022
  • This video answers the question: Can I analyze the case of RaDonda Vaught?
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ความคิดเห็น • 1.5K

  • @ThePlantUtopia
    @ThePlantUtopia 2 ปีที่แล้ว +529

    I am a nurse and I am kind of confused why a paralyzing agent would be in a Pyxis machine in the first place. This type of med is used for intubation and regular staff nurses don’t do that procedure. If the hospital would have kept these meds locked away and only certain staff would have access to it, then this never would have happened. The hospital and medical examiner should also be prosecuted because they both covered up the error which is negligence on their part. Since the hospital has all the money and they never seem to punish doctors when they make mistakes, the nurse ends up taking the fall for the entire incident. And I heard that she was helping out another nurse when this error happened, maybe if hospitals and nursing homes had safe nurse to patient ratios, med errors would be reduced and lives would be saved. Just my thoughts.

    • @PurposelyObtuse
      @PurposelyObtuse 2 ปีที่แล้ว +41

      This is a system error! He showed the lid too on a tiny valve like anyone could see that!!! This nurse was training another nurse at the time too! There was too much risk in this case! The system failed her!

    • @ThePlantUtopia
      @ThePlantUtopia 2 ปีที่แล้ว +79

      @@PurposelyObtuse when I was a nurse working inpatient psych there was almost a med error with clonidine where the doctor misplaced the decimal point and the nurse almost gave a patient 2 mg instead of 0.2 mg. Another nurse caught the error but the original nurse almost gave it even with a big red alert on the Pyxis drawer. I no longer work with patients because hospitals risk nurses licenses and patients’ lives everyday with overworking nurses and having unsafe nurse to patient ratios. I would rather sit behind a desk and not risk the license I worked very hard for. People that judge nurses for making mistakes never worked a 12 hour shift with a high work load. When people are overworked and extremely tired, they make mistakes. Hospitals know this but they fail to put things in place to make sure things like this don’t happen. And they end up throwing the nurse under the bus to take the fall. It is truly a sad situation. And they wonder why nurses are leaving the bedside.

    • @rachelk7555
      @rachelk7555 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Then go after the politicians who take funding from big healthcare corporations to keep these staffing levels completely inadequate.

    • @btetschner
      @btetschner 2 ปีที่แล้ว +60

      They put nurses in a position to fail.
      They make sure nurses take all the risks so they can avoid any legal ramifications (if anything goes wrong they blame the nurses).

    • @ThePlantUtopia
      @ThePlantUtopia 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@btetschner you state the truth.

  • @jen30551
    @jen30551 2 ปีที่แล้ว +274

    There are some serious problems in our healthcare system. While Redonda made a series of grave errors, the hospitals actions afterward are reprehensible and almost guarantees this will happen again. I want to see them punished but feel it is unlikely.

    • @brucejohnson9696
      @brucejohnson9696 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Hospitals are also profitable businesses.
      Killing defenseless patients isn't good for business or the financial bottom line from lawsuits.

    • @memyself4431
      @memyself4431 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I don’t trust hospitals, especially after c19 happens. They don’t have the care they always had and are tired and overworked and don’t like people coming in for “a cold”

    • @yvettevernet4759
      @yvettevernet4759 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Why were not two nurss checking the medication against the doctor's order before it was administrated to the patient? It was a tranquilising drug that should have been checked by two nurses,the mistake would have been noticed then and the proper drug administrated.

    • @jen30551
      @jen30551 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@yvettevernet4759 Absolutely agree. The industry I work in regularly implements a two party buy off for inspection points that are not at all life threatening. I would think this has to do with hospital policy. I also wonder if part of the series of mistakes Redonda made were related to stress, overwork and exhaustion. That is something I regularly see everywhere now.

    • @yvettevernet4759
      @yvettevernet4759 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@jen30551 Could be that she was stressed but if the policy of two nurses checking a drug that would be administrated intraveinously as a tranquiliser had been implemented this terrible mistake would no have occured.

  • @DaisyLee1963
    @DaisyLee1963 2 ปีที่แล้ว +498

    I'm a nurse. This case disturbs me, makes me think. Cases like this can make me consider my own practice in a critical fashion. The idea of "missing something" has always given me pause, and I'm sure it makes other healthcare workers think twice and thrice. Maybe that's the only good part of cases like this - if you let them, they can make health care workers examine themselves, and perhaps avoid future mistakes.
    When I heard of this case, my first thought was, didn't Radonda monitor the patient's reaction to the drug after she gave it? Couldn't she tell the patient's vital signs indicated increasing distress? Versed's not something you administer, then walk away for half an hour. You monitor the patient, for God's sake. Sedated people are extremely vulnerable. Hard to say how and why the patient went unmonitored. Bad practice? Distraction? Overwork? Complacency? I suspect there's more to the story.
    Vanderbilt Hospital's hiding what happened doesn't surprise me one bit. It's partly an outcome of the idea that a hospital should be run on a "business model" (@@) rather than as a health care center. There's also this myth that healthcare can "take care of its own" including its own bad actors. In my opinion, it cannot police itself, at least not entirely.
    I'm sad for the patient and for her family. The patient's death must have been awful.
    I'm conflicted about Radonda. Usually when big medical mistakes happen, they don't happen in a vacuum. They are an outgrowth of a wilderness of error, combined perhaps with increased-on-chronic personal stress.
    The stakes are high in healthcare. It's extremely important for healthcare workers to be in environments that monitor for distracted, overwhelmed workers and that honestly encourage telling the truth about mistakes.

    • @purplgrits7916
      @purplgrits7916 2 ปีที่แล้ว +61

      Radonda was floating that day, taking a patient to MRI, had an orientee with her. She was like a transport nurse that day. She gave the Vecoronium and left the patient in MRI where there was a delay getting the patient in the scanner. I agree this was an ICU patient, we always had to monitor ours during transfers. System errors caused this death from the Pixis override to leaving a sedated patient. Their policies were to blame.

    • @emarie1513
      @emarie1513 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Your comments are excellent!

    • @sarahalbers5555
      @sarahalbers5555 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Thank you so much for your insight and professional experience and explanation. Anytime I got Versed was prior to a surgical procedure and was monitored carefully. My heart goes out to this poor woman's family. My niece went to med school at Vanderbilt, and has always been thought of as top notch.

    • @mikitz
      @mikitz 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      Hospitals should probably conduct literacy exams for their new staff. Just an idea, wouldn't harm anyone.

    • @DaisyLee1963
      @DaisyLee1963 2 ปีที่แล้ว +53

      @@purplgrits7916
      I understand. Policies and work environment set these situations up to happen. I believe that 100%. I hear you. But in the moment, boots-on-the-ground caregivers like nurses must make decisions regardless of policy to protect themselves and their patients. Let this case be an example of the wisdom of taking a stand that policy be damned, I'm monitoring my sedated patient, and if the pencil-necks in the board rooms have a problem with it, let them fire me, I'll find a nursing job elsewhere and good riddance to them for me. I know it's a scary thing to think about - standing up to the wigs and risking your job, risking your paycheck needed to support yourself and your loved ones, but it's a must sometimes. And I've found that when as a nurse I honestly talk sense to my coworkers and to my superiors, I don't get fired, I get listened to.
      I'm not attacking Daronda. She'll suffer the consequences of her actions and I don't need to add to that. I'm willing to guess that the patient was unmonitored at least partly because of staffing pressures and assorted issues. That's sad.
      As for putting nurses in situations where they have to override the pyxis, Vanderbilt should go down for that. They knew the nurses were doing it therefore they were responsible.
      And as for nurses being held criminally liable, I'm okay with that, particularly in extreme cases. However, where the hell is Vanderbilt's criminal liability? If anything, Vanderbilt's policies, if they led or contributed to a death, how could they not be liable? Vanderbilt's responsibility here, you could argue, is wider and more far-reaching than Daronda's. I'm unaware of the details of the case, but is Vanderbilt being held criminally liable? Are the policy makers in need of criminal defense attorneys? I think we'll see safer policies when we start holding the wigs criminally responsible, too, not just the nurses.
      I keep going back to the problem of business-model healthcare. It needs to stop. As does the faulty notion that healthcare can police itself. It obviously can't. And if nurses are to be held criminally responsible in disastrous cases, hold the hospital responsible, too.

  • @Veronica-pt8pi
    @Veronica-pt8pi 2 ปีที่แล้ว +276

    This is a lesson to know and practice our five rights every time! Right patient right drug right dose right route right time.

    • @stanmil5495
      @stanmil5495 2 ปีที่แล้ว +38

      We use the 7 r's additionally right documentation, right response

    • @KellyDVance
      @KellyDVance 2 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      My husband (a former USAF medic and a one time nursing student) and our friend (a former USAF medic and current nurse) were literally talking about the 5Rs last night. They both had them drilled into their heads in the first weeks of nursing. My husband, even though not having completed nursing school and having learned it over a decade ago, still has it memorized.
      This case hits a bit close to home for him as if he hadn't questioned what antibiotic a nurse was about to give me while I was asleep post delivery, I would be dead. The nurse never checked the bright red allergy band on my wrist and almost gave me a drug that would have sent me into anaphylaxis. Too many people skip safety in favor of speed.

    • @bthomson
      @bthomson 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Talk about a guardian angel!

    • @janiesmys461
      @janiesmys461 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      This is a lesson that all people can make mistakes and criminal prosecution will make healthcare less safe. Why tell the truth if you can go to prison? Just Culture.

    • @KellyDVance
      @KellyDVance 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      @@janiesmys461 this was beyond a mistake. This was her criminally ignoring her training. This was not just a lack of professionalism, this was negligence on a lethal scale. Giving an incorrect dose is a mistake. Giving a medication that comes in a completely different form, has warning labels, and failing to do the most basic steps of your training goes beyond an error. If a medical professional is so worried that they do their job so badly they could be criminally liable than they shouldn't be in the medical field.

  • @DM-ql6ps
    @DM-ql6ps 2 ปีที่แล้ว +44

    The thing that upsets me is that while the nurse is facing prosecution, Vanderbilt who is also responsible is essentially getting off scott-free. Our justice system needs better ways of punishing companies that behave badly.

  • @AMM3.
    @AMM3. 2 ปีที่แล้ว +77

    her employer is as guilty as she is. I'm a pharmacy technician, if we override the computer it has to be double checked and signed by another employee, any non-compliance would be flagged in a monthly audit.. seems that nobody was taking responsibility (including her)to protect the hospital, the employees or the patients. It's very scary that some institutions run with such a disregard for basic safety guidelines.. I don't understand how they legally maintain a license

    • @Nan-59
      @Nan-59 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Exactly. I think her employer is more at fault than even she is.

    • @AMM3.
      @AMM3. 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@Nan-59 yeah, employees don't make the rules, they just follow them and if nobody enforces them... Exhibit A
      I would run so fast from an employer that irresponsible.. rather than risk my own butt

    • @timmyturner999_
      @timmyturner999_ 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Okay so you are bias that’s why u didn’t sentence her hope she rots in prison

    • @maxalberts2003
      @maxalberts2003 ปีที่แล้ว

      Vanderbilt is a "teaching hospital." There's a wider berth for mistakes in those places than in hospitals that don't work with students on a daily basis.

    • @seersha2937
      @seersha2937 ปีที่แล้ว

      100%

  • @stephanieg.1037
    @stephanieg.1037 2 ปีที่แล้ว +82

    I think you left some parts out. #1 Radanda was a new nurse of only 2 years yet was already training another new nurse.#2 The area where the medication was given did not have a scanner#3 It was not hospital policy to stay with a patient who had been given a medication like the one ordered. #4 She didn't leave the patient alone, she left the patient with the technicians, and they told her it was fine. #5 The dose she gave may not have even been lethal, and due to the cover up by the hospital no autopsy was done. They tried to prove she gave more than she admitted to by using evidence that the hospital (the hospital that lied continually) had kept for a year before authorities took it into their possession. Anything could have been done to the evidence during that time.

    • @5pid3rman80
      @5pid3rman80 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Your #5 point is one that I considered: the dose for Vecuronium is 0.1mg/kg, now a lot of assumptions have to take place here, but assuming she did her due diligence and gave 2 mg Vec instead of 2 mg Versed (a common sedative dose) the amount given wouldn't be therapeutic to achieve paralysis, at least not completely, as this would have been a dose for a person weighing about 45 lbs. Despite even that, so much went wrong here, and a life was lost, tragically...

    • @ronn68
      @ronn68 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Hospitals have nurses with a few months experience training nurses. Scanner does not matter. Meds are supposed to be read with human eyes whether scanned or not.

    • @stephanieg.1037
      @stephanieg.1037 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@ronn68 New nurses should absolutely not be training new nurses. That is dangerous. Human eyes fail. Also, why are people acting like she made a conscious choice to not check the med? I've written a paper and proofread it only to find several typos the next day. Why? Because your brain fills in the gaps. How many times have you left the house and thought you left something plugged in? How many times were you right? Or, have you done that same task so many times you went on auto pilot and that's why you don't remember? Have you ever driven home and not remembered how you got there? Again, automatic auto pilot. It happens when you do familiar tasks. That's why they should always have a backup systems that check for errors.

    • @CoffeeLover-mz7bk
      @CoffeeLover-mz7bk 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      The technicians didn't check up on the patient. Plenty of the blame can go around to the technicians and administration. Plus it should not have been in Pyxis in the first place.

    • @rggm-bl1xl
      @rggm-bl1xl ปีที่แล้ว

      @@CoffeeLover-mz7bk i think the techs were outside the imaging area….behind the glass divider to shield them from the mri or ct scan in process.

  • @srsusansummers3070
    @srsusansummers3070 2 ปีที่แล้ว +123

    A nurse saved my life by questioning a doctors order. Thanks to her I am alive and well today.

    • @THE-id1by
      @THE-id1by 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Ironic, this nurse could have saved a life by following a doctor's order.

    • @roberturich1813
      @roberturich1813 ปีที่แล้ว

      She may saved the doctor's career too. My brother in law is doctor and I don't know how he does it. ONE decimal point off, misspelled medication names etc can kill someone even when a doctor is normally competent. Glad you're here today. My grandmother was a nurse, they really run hospitals.

    • @sandhanitizer15
      @sandhanitizer15 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@roberturich1813to be fair, in many other fields of work if you're off by one decimal spot, some stuff is going to be really messed up lol

  • @deb_diaries
    @deb_diaries 2 ปีที่แล้ว +58

    As a retired registered nurse that witnessed many EGREGIOUS nursing errors, my experience was that the medical institution covered up these errors EVERY SINGLE TIME. It was despicable.

  • @PositiveMommaLife
    @PositiveMommaLife 2 ปีที่แล้ว +61

    I’m a nurse. A lot of drugs are similar in name. They teach you the five rights. Right patient, right drug, right dose, right route, right time. There are many factors that contributed to this error, but it does come down to actually reading the drug name and identifying the patient old school style.

    • @Jabo__Jabo
      @Jabo__Jabo 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Seriously. I agree. I mean, read the label on the vial. OMG.

    • @lorrainemoderate2816
      @lorrainemoderate2816 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      exactly, where was her duty of care, the hospitals policies and procedures? she ignored the very basics, as Mark said, she deserves all she got. she is a disgrace to nursing, as is the hospital......that poor poor patient.....xxxx love to the family, In Australia she would have been ostracize rather than supported, and jailed. surely no professional person would support such negligent actions.

    • @JohnLee-or9im
      @JohnLee-or9im 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@lorrainemoderate2816 i think what she did and what occurred is horrible and ridiculously irresponsible, but not criminal???, there is no intent to cause harm, the hospital did all it could to hide the facts from the authorities and when it finally comes out they throw her under the bus AND only then make changes to their system that helped cause the problem,

    • @sandan778
      @sandan778 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Those 5 R's are a sham, you do not have time looking at your 5 R's when you have 7 to 20 patients to medicate and 5 of them are crying, the other 5 patients are complaining of nausea and your phone keeps ringing and families and your CNAs keep asking simple and stupid questions over and over because they don't want to be responsible with their answers and want you the nurse to be the person responsible for all kinds of issues from toiletries to the toilet functioning to everything under that building.

    • @beachgirl468
      @beachgirl468 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@sandan778 Yes, you MAKE the time....it's THAT important!

  • @Earlybird86
    @Earlybird86 2 ปีที่แล้ว +206

    I’ll accept the necessity of criminal prosecution of the medical community when criminal prosecution is just as eager and capable of convicting Vanderbilt as it is to prosecute Radonda Vaught.
    My fear is nurses will become scapegoats for hospital corporations.

    • @calmbeforethestormo4136
      @calmbeforethestormo4136 2 ปีที่แล้ว +29

      They already are

    • @trudlebug7988
      @trudlebug7988 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@calmbeforethestormo4136 I wish I could upvote this a thousand times!

    • @jooleebilly
      @jooleebilly 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@calmbeforethestormo4136 Yeah they are. Giant corporation fails to protect their patients, and hides it for months? Blame the nurse! But only after there's publicity, and fingers start pointing at Vanderbilt.

    • @ag-om6nr
      @ag-om6nr 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Doctors just go to another state to practice ! This nurse was crucified !

    • @A-Grammie-On-the-ROCK
      @A-Grammie-On-the-ROCK 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The medical big wigs from the WHO and down to the family doctor are killing and injuring people by the 100s of 1000s and yet they are not being prosecuted.

  • @jdomsmith
    @jdomsmith 2 ปีที่แล้ว +59

    The 3 checks: 1.) Check the medication with the patient's record 2.) After preparing the medication 3.) At the bedside after identifying the Pt using 2 identifiers
    The 6 rights to medication administration: 1.) Right Patient 2.) Right medication 3.) Right dose 4.) Right route 5.) Right time 6.) Right reason
    - being consistent using the 3 checks and 6 rights saves you from this nightmare

    • @sbowenful
      @sbowenful 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      As a retired registered nurse, I totally agree with knowing the 5 rights! This was HAMMERED into us as students and on the state boards of testing to get your license. Pure neglect of not following standard protocols! This is sad all the way around!

    • @mias.2159
      @mias.2159 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      The medical record was not available. Plz see Nurse Liz episode regarding this case!

    • @saysHotdogs
      @saysHotdogs 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Can there be a check where you tell the patient which medication you intend to use, and show them? I’m not a nurse so I don’t know how this would work out in the long run.

    • @stephanieg.1037
      @stephanieg.1037 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@saysHotdogs You can always ask. That is your right.

  • @paintitblack9712
    @paintitblack9712 2 ปีที่แล้ว +79

    As a nurse it's unfortunate the hospital didn't also face legal responsibility. I understand she made multiple mistakes however the hospital walked away Scott free.
    Edit: reaching a settlement with the family isn't justice

    • @agilli5388
      @agilli5388 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Hospital's cover up mistakes of all kinds because they will not hire enough nurses, nurses are the bottom of priority of their budget. Nurses need a strong union. They hire the newest RN and fire or "get rid of" longer employed nursed because it is cheaper. They don't care about patients, only the bottom line-their profit. Wonder if Vanderbilt still makes their RN as the unit housekeepers.

    • @misstuxbrandi
      @misstuxbrandi 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      A settlement with a Gag Order. But the "for profit" hospital is totally innocent. They're about as innocent as their faulty epic system and pyxis. Bet her armband (that she didn't have on) would have been 1 of the many road blocks that could of prevented this. The nurse does carry some responsibility but she was also in a perfect storm that she shouldn't have been due to the failure of our medical system and society, people that have no clue what they're talking about are happily willing to stone her as they make her the scape goat. You know what I find the most disgusting? The fact that the leaders of this hospital, the owners, and all the other rich elites that have the slightest connection to this know what they did and they know what they're doing. They are going to keep shoveling out $$$ for the best PR, legal staff and media relations while they keep profiting and people keep dying. This is only the tip of the iceberg of what's been going on the past five years. I promise. Anyone not in the know, your ignorance IS bliss.

    • @katdeekelly3228
      @katdeekelly3228 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@misstuxbrandi who knows if there is even a scanner down there. It should have been rescheduled like they originally were going to instead of a doc writing this order with no monitoring for last minute anxiety

    • @timhocking529
      @timhocking529 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The nurse was involved in the cover up as well as she didn’t report the hospital.

    • @TodaysBibleTruth
      @TodaysBibleTruth 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes, it is the elephant in the room.

  • @annal7364
    @annal7364 2 ปีที่แล้ว +182

    So sick of big organizations covering up crimes. We teach and expect _kids_ to take responsibility for _their_ mistakes, accidental or purposeful, but adults go and do the opposite. You said precisely what I would have said about this situation. I wish I could give you a great big hug for understanding how I feel! Love you, Dr. G! 🤗

    • @bthomson
      @bthomson 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Yes! Do as I say not as I do does not work!

    • @TanyaRadic
      @TanyaRadic 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Should have been planned procedure by anesthesia

    • @crystalairgood9845
      @crystalairgood9845 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      This

    • @scottricci5063
      @scottricci5063 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Drugs, not hugs, weirdo! Haha

    • @MotJ949
      @MotJ949 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Unfortunately, this is how kids *used* to be raised. So many kids now have parents, teachers, and society at large making excuses for their poor behavior and performance and everybody gets a trophy just for showing up. I’m not surprised that adults don’t take responsibility for their behavior… their parents blamed the teachers for their kids failing!

  • @jeanniestamps6996
    @jeanniestamps6996 2 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    As an anesthetist it disturbs me that anyone without anesthesia training would even have access to Vec or any other paralytic for that matter. It should NEVER happen for any reason. They aren’t taught the uses and dangers of these drugs and therefore shouldn’t be able to touch them.

    • @BeatlesCentricUniverse
      @BeatlesCentricUniverse ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Why would you, as a nurse anesthetist, think nurses "aren't taught the dangers of these drugs?" Spare us all.

    • @seersha2937
      @seersha2937 ปีที่แล้ว

      ☑️

  • @Karen-Not-That-Karen
    @Karen-Not-That-Karen 2 ปีที่แล้ว +72

    This makes me wonder how many other patients she was careless with

    • @sarah2.017
      @sarah2.017 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      I'm a retired pharmacist. I agree, and I suspect that THIS is why she's being thrown under the bus - that we don't have the whole story.

    • @rubyoro0
      @rubyoro0 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      It makes me wonder why so many nurses are supporting her.

    • @1019mommy
      @1019mommy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Unless you work in a hospital you have no idea what it’s like. That is what is so frustrating. We can’t even began to tell you how it is. I can guarantee that any nurse who has ever treated you or a family member has made a medication error. Most are so small it doesn’t get reported because it causes no harm.

    • @dtulip58
      @dtulip58 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@sarah2.017 you think she has killed others?

    • @user-ci8gj4ex5o
      @user-ci8gj4ex5o 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@rubyoro0 because private hospitals don’t care about competent nurses. They just want there stock numbers to go up and please their stockholders. They just want warm bodies in there. When they make a mistake they will throw them under the bus even though many factors go into these mistakes.

  • @thomas-marx
    @thomas-marx 2 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    I was a nurse for 35 years.
    Police and nurses should not be protected from criminal prosecution. The majority would never have made those mistakes. Having the power of life and death over others carries a heavy burden. If the consequences of your actions is more than you can shoulder then choose another way to make a buck!

  • @marilynquilts
    @marilynquilts 2 ปีที่แล้ว +87

    I am a retired RN and I am appalled at how many times this nurse had an opportunity to rectify her original error and she did not! This is more than sloppy, it is criminal.

    • @Kinypshun
      @Kinypshun 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You've helped me sort through my own opinion as a layperson regarding this case.

    • @kathleenbueter1272
      @kathleenbueter1272 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@deborahmulkey1627 It is absolutely insane for vecuronium be placed next to Valium. That is a mistake waiting to happen and unfortunately it did

    • @MM-gd1dw
      @MM-gd1dw 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@kathleenbueter1272 *Versed* but end result was the same.

    • @mariahernandez3674
      @mariahernandez3674 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@deborahmulkey1627 100 percent one can’t hope that technology is in placed to do all of the work. You still have to understand what your doing and know that there is a chance of mistakes.

    • @22werwerwer
      @22werwerwer 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Am I the only person that thinks perhaps the orientation process had something to do with it. Like when management tries to use an oriented as counted individual staff?! This case stinks. The error was so flagrantly avoidable. Or did this nurse have a drug problem the hospital wasn't dealing with. I feel like there is more to the story we haven't heard.

  • @vickiejohnson30
    @vickiejohnson30 2 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    I have lived in Tennessee, and I would rather operate on myself, than to ever seek medical care there again.

    • @Vroomerz
      @Vroomerz 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Are you accepting new patients? What insurances do you accept?

    • @maam-yj8ph
      @maam-yj8ph ปีที่แล้ว

      I was going to say I don't remember Vanderbilt ever being regarded as a model hospital. I could not tell if Dr. Grande was being sarcastic or not in his intro.

  • @diannt9583
    @diannt9583 2 ปีที่แล้ว +203

    Absolutely good analysis. I'd also love to see the hospital get charged for the negligent cover up.

    • @tankthearc9875
      @tankthearc9875 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      I have argued with many nurses on this topic and they all seem to not be accountable for negligence . neither do cops. i argued them to resign if they could not administer the right drugs and double check before doing so.

    • @user-ci8gj4ex5o
      @user-ci8gj4ex5o 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@tankthearc9875 ok Karen

    • @Tsumami__
      @Tsumami__ 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      That’s the thing, though, they won’t be, neither will any of the doctors who covered it up. This is the actual root of the issue.
      It doesn’t matter whether it’s engineering, nursing, whatever. Higher ups never get held accountable, it’s always the lower level employees who do, despite the fact that often the culture pervasive in their work environment is the catalyst for mistakes.

    • @pedinurse1
      @pedinurse1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      they get fined by CMS, and its usually a hefty fine. At our hospital a PREGNANT RN was allowed to hang an anti-cancer drug which is a no no. The hospital was fined $10,000.

    • @ev25zv
      @ev25zv 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@pedinurse1 Screw paying penny fines. Every single person involved in this coverup should be removed and charged.

  • @pegstervegas
    @pegstervegas 2 ปีที่แล้ว +58

    Why is the nurse the only one being held accountable? The hospital and its’ systems failed her and the patient. Redonda immediately reported what happened. Then the hospital covered it up. Who is acting criminally here?

    • @hairywitch4063
      @hairywitch4063 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      What else could she do but report it? The woman was dead. There was no covering that up. But, you are right. The hospital is responsible as well. That was why they were sued and had to pay a settlement.

    • @gmamagillmore4812
      @gmamagillmore4812 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes, but hospitals are corporations. They are protected from the consequences of their actions. Besides Vandy is part of the historically spotless Tennessee government. And she is only a nurse, and individual ,where are your values?

    • @timmyturner999_
      @timmyturner999_ 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      She killed someone end of story

  • @jhern083
    @jhern083 2 ปีที่แล้ว +26

    She was honest and upfront about the situation. The hospital swept it under the rug. If she's criminally culpable, then the others involved with the cover up should be prosecuted as well.
    We're constantly short staffed at the bedside and asked to do the impossible with limited resources. This is a complex issue that doesn't deserve one person being scapegoated like this.
    Sauce: I'm an RN, practicing for 6 years in the acute care setting.

    • @darkmatters4907
      @darkmatters4907 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Yes! The hospital pushed the blame onto her once their funding was threatened.

    • @ThePatynight
      @ThePatynight ปีที่แล้ว

      No. She didn’t. She hide the case for many years and found a new job. She said just to the hospital administrators only.

  • @m.f.richardson1602
    @m.f.richardson1602 2 ปีที่แล้ว +105

    Excellent analysis.
    As a non-medical person, I've worked in the medical community for a few years. Cover-Up , is a big thing.
    It's disgusting and criminal.

    • @bthomson
      @bthomson 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      MFR - And the cover-up is almost always uncovered and the error compounded!

    • @virginiamoss7045
      @virginiamoss7045 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      The nurse did not cover anything up; the hospital did! The hospital should go on trial.

    • @SoManyRandomRamblings
      @SoManyRandomRamblings 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      You are right, It's a super big thing. I have a BSN and I get continuing education course material (and internally they warn/teach that 250,000 patients will experience an adverse event ANNUALLY and over 100,000 will die from care received ANNUALLY) this is something they internally acknowledge is a major problem. That is why so many other nurses went on TV saying she shouldn't be punished harshly.... because they fear similar repercussions for something they know is SUPER PREVALENT and statistically have all done themselves.
      I had to leave the medical field because my pointing out all their errors and trying to fix things creates a 'hostile work environment' according to HR

    • @m.f.richardson1602
      @m.f.richardson1602 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@SoManyRandomRamblings
      Thank you, Random Ramblings for your response.
      In the early 70s, I was in a nursing program.
      After two semesters I was asked to leave the program. Because I asked too many questions.

    • @qlauraq912
      @qlauraq912 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Except Vaught didnt lie or cover up-she reported herself! Vanderbilt and their doctor covered it up!

  • @pinkvolo
    @pinkvolo 2 ปีที่แล้ว +73

    Had this happen to a family member. Over dose of heparin. The nurse denied the mistake and I went ballistic and to the top of the food chain in that place. Already in a very compromised health situation, this would had been lethal for this person had I not been there. Don't be afraid to ask what it is and how much. It might jog someone's mind and avoid a mistake.

    • @bthomson
      @bthomson 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Yes! Much of our health care has devolved into our own responsibility!

    • @moecuspocus
      @moecuspocus 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      Every patient needs an advocate even if it's their own family or friends.

    • @stephanieg.1037
      @stephanieg.1037 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Very good advice 👌

    • @Tim_ra
      @Tim_ra 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Oddly, I see a lot of overdoses of Heparin. I'm unclear why that particular medication is overdosed.

    • @theresemendez8052
      @theresemendez8052 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      RN here. Please, never be afraid to ask what is being given/done to/for you or a loved one in any health care area. I want you to ask. “The doctor said I don’t have to take the red pill any longer” sends me right back to the order to double check again. That’s a win-win. You win because you get the right treatment. I win because I didn’t make a mistake and possibly harm you. Ask. Please.

  • @primordialmeow7249
    @primordialmeow7249 2 ปีที่แล้ว +88

    I am an RN. The "system errors" that were in place before this nurse pushed the med are glaring. This is a sad day as med errors will now go underground and will never be resolved. So sad that it's, "Always blame the nurse."

    • @superclaymaster
      @superclaymaster 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      I can’t get over how they had to ‘train ‘, their nurses to subvert the electronic double check system. I heard elsewhere that that’d been going on for a LONG time. There’s no way to tell what her work load was that shift, where else was she expected to be at the same time. She owned the mistake the hospital hid their culpability. That place should face severe penalties.

    • @janiesmys461
      @janiesmys461 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      It is said that nurses have to use 32 technology workarounds during a 12 hour shift just to do their jobs.

    • @btetschner
      @btetschner 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      The public used nurses as a human shield from the beginning of the pandemic.

    • @ean5469
      @ean5469 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Here comes more documentation!!
      Nurses will bear the brunt of extra work. Check with 2 other nurses before giving? Have the unit manager check every med?

    • @btetschner
      @btetschner 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@ean5469 My favorite ridiculous check is "check with the doctor or pharmacist" when there is one nurse, one CNA, 20 patients (many of which are fall risks), annoying family members everywhere, and the management threatens to write you up and/or fire you if your meds are not passed in time.

  • @renhersan
    @renhersan 2 ปีที่แล้ว +82

    This is the most objective analysis I've seen regarding this case.

    • @chocolatethunder192
      @chocolatethunder192 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I agree! Lots of other people have an agenda or discuss this case using emotional reasoning.

  • @lizabme7678
    @lizabme7678 2 ปีที่แล้ว +58

    I was an ICU nurse for most of my career and also did conscious sedation for a few years with the drug versed. I also administered paralytics and sedation while people were on the vent so I know any paralytic is brightly labeled with red labels and has multiple barriers to get into it. At the very least anytime you give an IV sedating drug you need to assess immediately for effect and come back within 10 - 15 minutes to reassess how the patient is doing. The effect of vecuronium is almost immediate and should have been noticed. Initially I was ambivalent about this when I caught the end of the trial and heard Ladonna speak to reporters but I hadn't known which drugs she mixed up. Now that I know more details I do think it's right but I don't know that eight years is appropriate. Med errors are most often caused by systemic failures but bad nurses can eff it up all on their own once in a while. The 2 neurosurgeons should also get a ding against their liscences for lying to the medical examiner. I hope JCAHO cited the hospital also.

    • @kitchenskills5427
      @kitchenskills5427 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I agree with you 8 years seems egregious and was an overcompensation by the State after the publicity associated with this case. It was truly a horrible way to die by being given a paralytic and I am not sure why it wasn't immediately noted when she became apneic and unresponsive. I am assuming she was going for an MRI, but she should have been observed for medication effect even if the nurse had thought she had been given versed there is still a risk of respiratory depression.

    • @Solisvn1990
      @Solisvn1990 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      As a critical care nurse, I agree with this the most. I can't say it better myself.

    • @jooleebilly
      @jooleebilly 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@kitchenskills5427 And there were no techs in the imaging room for 30 minutes. They're the ones who found her. She died alone and probably terrified. This horrible death was not just caused by 1 nurse, but a system built to fail and then hide its mistakes.

    • @charlesdarwin5185
      @charlesdarwin5185 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It was 2 neurologists who certified the death from a subdural bleed .
      Why did the patient need a PET study?

    • @jooleebilly
      @jooleebilly 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@charlesdarwin5185 I guess to find the subdural bleed that killed her? JK they lied for the hospital so Vanderbilt could hide it.

  • @jacquelinejacobson6789
    @jacquelinejacobson6789 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    As a retired ICU RN for 40 years - I can tell you that the paralytic administered to her rendered her helpless to move anything, including her diaphragm, and she had full consciousness through most of the time it took her to smother. Question - video says she was a "licensed " nurse. Is this an LPN or an RN? There is a big difference in responsibilities. Absolutely NO LPN should be allowed to give Versed.

    • @rbkhcrw2752
      @rbkhcrw2752 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      RN, 2 yrs experience, no patients that day, no stress per her own deposition, working as a help nurse, and Teaching a new nurse!

    • @barbaraminchew2991
      @barbaraminchew2991 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      No r.n. gave the med.

    • @barbaraminchew2991
      @barbaraminchew2991 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      A R.N. GAVE THE MED.

  • @moe9246
    @moe9246 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    The patient should not have been left alone for thirty minutes whether she was given Versed, or any other medication of this nature. She could have been put on Oxygen and been put on a vent temporarily.
    All the other mistakes that were made were very much negligent in safe nursing administration of meds.
    I am an RN and have given Versed many times.

  • @jazmeena6639
    @jazmeena6639 2 ปีที่แล้ว +45

    Taking the erroneous medication out of a "Documed" type of dispenser is one thing. Initially I had fortified the nurse, but as the facts kept emerging, it got worse. One of the cardinal rules of administering any medication as a nurse is the
    "Five Rights" or the "5 R's"l
    1. Right Drug
    2. Right Dose
    3. Right Time
    4. Right Route of administering
    5. Right Patient
    She mentally conceived she was giving Versed, she should've checked those rights twice, let alone giving Vercuronium. It's not rocket science that you should follow these guidelines. Every instinct in her should have ceased her.
    However, the cover-up Vanderbilt orchestrated and executed, is nothing short of horrible. From the CEO down, they all should be held accountable for being an appendage. The family being able to be bought off for their muteness is revolting and Vanderbilt is a Despicable hospital.

    • @chocolatethunder192
      @chocolatethunder192 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      I agree 100%

    • @ev25zv
      @ev25zv 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      And just think how many get away with it.

    • @jazmeena6639
      @jazmeena6639 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ev25zv Absolutely!

    • @jessetaylor7951
      @jessetaylor7951 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You "fortified" her??? 🤔🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️

    • @jazmeena6639
      @jazmeena6639 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@jessetaylor7951 Fortified means to strengthen, encourage, secure. The hospital not reporting the incident gave that nurse the strength to move on without consequences.

  • @brucejohnson9696
    @brucejohnson9696 2 ปีที่แล้ว +111

    That nurse just made too many mistakes.
    Agreed, at some point the negligence just becomes so gross/reckless that it does rise to the level of a criminal offense. Especially if it causes the painful death of a vulnerable, elderly patient.
    The hospital also should have had better oversight and safeguards in place.

    • @mariahernandez3674
      @mariahernandez3674 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Thank you for speaking sense. Every nurse is saying this will set a precedent, but don’t talk about how negligent the nurse was. You can’t blame stress or a place being to busy for a death of an innocent person

    • @bronzergoth7598
      @bronzergoth7598 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      yeah, that list of things she had to ignore to make this mistake was pretty damning. ignoring that many warnings and procedures, but having enough presence of mind to perform an override? how can that happen?? she's dangerous

    • @22werwerwer
      @22werwerwer 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I'm wracking my brain about this. I'm wondering, and there is still definitely fault on the part of Rodonda, if she and her orientee were used as separate staff and thus she was counted and they were separated. I'm wondering if the orientee made the error. Hospitals routinely try to take nurses prematurely off orientation.
      The drug that was supposed to given is never reconstituted. Just the fact that the med needed to be mixed would give any nurse pause, enough to call pharmacy or at the very least another nurse.
      I realized seeing pictures on another video something I had forgotten, versed is always in a brown bottle. It must be light sensitive.
      There are problems with the med dispensing systems, but a nurse who works in ICU would know to monitor a pt and not leave the pt. The pt should have been on a monitor in the machine! I had heard the nurse was called away to the ER.
      The hospital attempted to hide this event. Perhaps the idea is to trial this nurse to open up testimony to further prosecute the hospital? I don't even know if that's a thing.

    • @renorrc7222
      @renorrc7222 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      This case comes down to a nurse misreading the label, and the hsopital not having a scanner that worked. They claimed they fixed it but it was not fixed. Now I'm not defending the mistake, you can't throw nurses and doctors in jail when they make every mistake, all nurses and doctors would quit because it's just not possible to never make a mistake in your job. Lets remember your asking for people to be absolutely perfect all the time. Lets try to remember she had never previously had a med error and she reported herself.

    • @sheilawashington7658
      @sheilawashington7658 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I needed to read your response. Glad I did. I was texting my outrage to the analysis and saw the word in your post that calmed me down. The word is "gross", gross negligence. I have had and have heard of close calls but never to this extent. The governing bodies need to ask about the elephant in the room. Why did she show such gross negligence? There are a lot of "Whys". We all need to ask why did this happen and how can this be prevented in the future. Will nurses become lees forthright in reporting incidents? Why? or Why not? So far a response to the whys only get crickets. It is better to be humble and realize that you have the wrong drug instead of feigning that you know what about a drug. The preceptor seems to be the reason for pushing on. Nothing else makes sense. If that is the case then criminal charge is a no-brainer, but how do you prove that.

  • @AliciaGuitar
    @AliciaGuitar 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Vandy patient here, and i have to agree Vandy is partly to blame. I was also given the wrong drug at Vandy... AFTER my bracelet was scanned and everything. There were definite procedural problems. I often feel a bit guilty for not sueing them when it happened to me.. but i felt SO sorry for the nurse and when the hospital administration met with me i was in a vulnerable state, and they may have taken advantage a bit. I felt guilty suing, but now guilty for not

  • @jaelzion
    @jaelzion 2 ปีที่แล้ว +63

    Yeah, Vaught lost me when she didn't scan the medication and patient's bracelet barcode. It's mandatory to use the bedside medication verification specifically to avoid situations just like this.

    • @ErinJayne82
      @ErinJayne82 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      Totally agree. I’m a clinical lab tech. I could understand one or even two of the errors she made but by not even attempting to verify the patient’s identity with a simple barcode scan, she lost me. Like I’m having a hard time not thinking there’s more going on here.

    • @pegstervegas
      @pegstervegas 2 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      Except when the hospital does not provide this equipment. There were no scanners in Radiology when this happened n

    • @JaneMiller0101
      @JaneMiller0101 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      The scanners were not working. That is why nothing was scanned. This safeguard would have prevented this tragedy.

    • @M0rbidCuriositea
      @M0rbidCuriositea 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Two separate hospitals I have worked at do not have scanners in MRI. That's an easily preventable system issue.

    • @jaelzion
      @jaelzion 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Okay - I based my comment on the information presented here and Dr Grande said at 8:35 that Vaught did not scan the medication and patient's wristband (implying that she could have).

  • @treborria4001
    @treborria4001 2 ปีที่แล้ว +69

    I think Radonda needs to take responsibility for this, she said it herself. However, I disagree with your somewhat cynical take on the nursing profession that hospital mismanagement makes them feel at liberty to not pay attention. In my experience, nurses are much more worried they will take the fall for doctors and administrators' mistakes, rather than the other way round. For example, it is common for on call night shift doctors nearing the end of their hours to put off care so that days shift will have to deal with a given problem and they won't have to come in the middle of the night. If something happens as a consequence of this, it's more likely to be pinned on nurse complacency or miscommunication than physician irresponsibility. Things like that happen all the time. Most hospitals are understaffed and nurses are often expected to take unsafe patient loads, pick up mandatory overtime hours, and work in environments where cost cutting and mismanagement make it difficult to operate safely. This is far from the only hospital overseen by the type of corrupt individuals who tried to cover this whole thing up. Rather than complacency, the nurses I interact with go to sleep terrified that tomorrow is going to be the day when, overstretched and exhausted, they make a mistake such as this. Ultimately, Rodonda made a terrible mistake which she must live with, but it's plausible to say that her managers created an environment where mistakes were much more likely. It's a crappy situation, no doubt. It's also crappy that the corrupt admins who did illegal things (like ask nurses to override safety protocols in the medication cabinets and hide negligence from the police) seem to be facing no responsibility outside earning a bad reputation. Correct me if I'm wrong. Radonda needs to take responsibility, but more investigation is needed.

    • @blackandred2x
      @blackandred2x 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      How do you NOT read the complete drug name or see the big warning color that says paralysis though. That's on her.

    • @treborria4001
      @treborria4001 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @Rocky I don't actually disagree - she made an inexcusable, idiotic mistake. The problem is that hospital administrations often make an environment where these sorts of errors are more likely. If nurses are doing (sometimes mandatory) overtime you could easily have someone coming on for their fourth or fifth 12 hour shift in a row, assigned more patients then they are supposed to who all need meds at certain time intervals or they will get more sick. Admins at this hospital apparently were illegally telling nurses to surpass some (to be fair, not all) of the safety checks on the drug storage machines essentially to save time and not have to hire more people. It's still ultimately her responsibility, I'm just saying there are plenty of people worth criticizing here.

    • @barbaragremaud3499
      @barbaragremaud3499 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      So true that it’s a problem with the hospital and staffing.

    • @GoodnightJLH
      @GoodnightJLH 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      We need a better system for sure. Yes. This nurse was grossly negligent. But these Pyxis dispensers have way too many warning so it becomes routine to bypass them. And the Pyxis system bypasses the check and balance of the pharmacist. Is that really appropriate for drugs like Vecuronium? Also, did the doctor order Versed electronically or was it a written or verbal order? Because when we have the nurse transcribe the order, get the medication out of the Pyxis and administer the medication, that’s just too many steps without any check and balance.

    • @btetschner
      @btetschner 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Look how the public used nurses as a human shield since the beginning of the pandemic.
      No one is standing up for nurses.

  • @guardiansanimalrescuestate7289
    @guardiansanimalrescuestate7289 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Dr Grande, I cannot express my gratitude for your videos. I’m in hospital for a month. My chemo isn’t working, so I’m getting a bone marrow transplant. And I have to stay here for at least a month. That prevents me from getting sicker when I’m in an isolation room. So I’m not exposed to any germs. I was just crying so hard. Then I saw u just posted. I know I sound lame, but the humor u have also helps boost moral.
    Thank goodness that my medical service dog is staying here in my room with me. It’s helped me so much. And my daughter comes 3 times a day to take Jake outside to potty. She also brings me things I need. I feel so blessed to have Jake. And your humor also cheers me. I would have fallen off the deep end if not for Jake and TH-cam. This is the lowest time in my life.
    To add to things, my grand daughter was born with DIPG. She passed away 2 weeks ago. Then my daughter took her own life cuz she lost her daughter. Every small thing means so much to me. Right now I’ve lost all hope. I also feel that we shouldn’t ever ever waste time at all. Missing opportunities to spend time with loved ones, well it only leads to guilt. I would do anything to spend one more minute with my loved ones. So I’m working on not losing any opportunities to spend time with loved ones. Because that alone makes me feel so useless. That’s why I’m so grateful for videos and time I can spend with the family I have left.
    To I thank u so much. It’s a lonely life.
    And to add to this story, I worked as a RN and then BSN at Vanderbilt. I also knew this nurse. The best way is to say she is an EX nurse.
    She seriously was very strange. I’ll tell u more if anyone wants to know. It was so clear that she wasn’t right upstairs. I feel that she needed a strong antipsychotic and to be locked up. She felt she was above the law.

    • @fetijajasari9522
      @fetijajasari9522 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      So extremely sorry for your losses! 💔 May the Lord console and heal you!
      Your words are very true!
      Hugs🤗🙌🏾

    • @cottontails9003
      @cottontails9003 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I hope everything goes well for you. Best wishes from me, and Australians.

    • @brigidroche1006
      @brigidroche1006 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Her actions seemed murderous To me. Not a mistake. Even so , may she find mercy. As with us. May your hospital room be a veritable sanctuary for you.🙏🕊🙏🕊🙏 Healing Blessings!!!

    • @guardiansanimalrescuestate7289
      @guardiansanimalrescuestate7289 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@brigidroche1006 thanks. Without my service dog, I would have flown the coop. Lol.

    • @louisecasino5059
      @louisecasino5059 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      this error is her fault how awful for that patient. I hope you transplant goes well my sister had it done .and is doing great.

  • @laffintig
    @laffintig 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I work at a med/mal law office. Medical "mistakes" happen much more than you would expect.

  • @KAli-dk6on
    @KAli-dk6on 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    My gosh, all I can think of is how much this poor elderly woman suffered! I watched the interview with this nurse, I didn't see any remorse, nothing. I'm glad you covered this one Dr. Grande 😊

  • @doctorshell7118
    @doctorshell7118 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Excellent analysis. She should not be exempt. It’s too bad that the laws don’t apply to law enforcement.

  • @9929kingfish
    @9929kingfish 2 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    I’m a nurse and I agree with the charges. There were too many safe guards in place that she completely neglected and then didn’t even monitor her patient afterwards is unacceptable as a nurse. Her main job is to monitor change and she failed on everything in this situation.

    • @davesfishingadventuressout8020
      @davesfishingadventuressout8020 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      i can tell by your statement you most likely are in management and not a bedside nurse

  • @fullmetal_neet2288
    @fullmetal_neet2288 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Finally some accountability in the medical community

    • @SoManyRandomRamblings
      @SoManyRandomRamblings 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Just a drop in the ocean of their mistakes. But a small victory for accountability.

    • @beagledog2001
      @beagledog2001 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I've been an RN for 38 years. I assure you that some of us DO try our best, and do not override safety checks as Ms. Vaught did.

  • @caseyg58
    @caseyg58 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    This is the best explanation of this case that I have heard. I was surprised when I watched the trial that the victim’s DIL said the family didn’t want the ex-nurse prosecuted. Truthfully I wouldn’t have been that forgiving. I’d want the public (possible future patients) to be aware of what happened.

  • @TheIddieMorris
    @TheIddieMorris 2 ปีที่แล้ว +53

    I’m an ICU Nurse, 24 years. This case: disturbing on a lot of levels. Her mistake was bizarre when you compare the two medications. Most people in my business call Versed midazolam. We don’t use brand names. Typically a Pyxis or Omnicell won’t deliver Versed. If you keep pushing the letters VE, the Pyxis says ok, you keep asking for Ve, I will give you VEC. In addition, if all these hospitals keep trying to do more with less, this is what you get. COVID just put the shortages under the microscope. I will say, this mistake…. Unacceptable.

    • @btetschner
      @btetschner 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I am a nurse too.
      I don't know the whole case here, but you seem to be trying to devalue another nurse to make yourself look better.

    • @TheIddieMorris
      @TheIddieMorris 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@btetschner so don’t comment if you don’t know the whole case🙄

    • @btetschner
      @btetschner 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@TheIddieMorris I know you are a self-interested person who would betray any nurse given the opportunity.

    • @btetschner
      @btetschner 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@TheIddieMorris Have you always thought of yourself first?

    • @TheIddieMorris
      @TheIddieMorris 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@btetschner you really don’t know anything and I’m done discussing this with you. Have a good day.

  • @petegallows5494
    @petegallows5494 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Of course she should have been charged. Like bad drivers that don't pay attention, are reckless etc, kill people on the roads.
    Imagine a delivery driver saying "but I didn't intentionally kill that pedestrian" - well, that's nice, but you shouldn't have ran the stop sign, while looking at your phone and driving on the wrong side of the road.
    It's not the same as if you're doing everything right and somebody jumps in front of your van and you run over them and kill them.
    It does matter if you intended to do something or not, but that doesn't mean you're now suddenly not responsible for your actions.
    You still messed up, you're still guilty of causing death to someone, who is innocent in that scenario.
    You have certain responsibility, you can't just say - "oh, stuff happens, nevermind. Now get off my back, otherwise other professional drivers will be afraid to drive their vehicles, because if they kill someone unintentionally, they might be prosecuted too".

  • @sharayscorner
    @sharayscorner 2 ปีที่แล้ว +95

    I'm not in the medical field, but I heard the drug she used is usually locked up and the packaging has extra color so it can stand out that it's stronger than most. She sounds like a sloppy nurse. You listed a lot of other ways she was negligent. If you aren't capable of paying attention to details, please stay out of the medical field. I feel for the victim and her family. It was a senseless death 😢

    • @bthomson
      @bthomson 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      And painful!!

    • @whalefuhk
      @whalefuhk 2 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      The drug she pulled should NEVER have even been on the floor she was on- it’s a paralytic used to intubate people and only used by anesthesiologist who pull their own meds separately. The medication dispenser where she got the med from was broken and the scanner that verifies patient ID and proper med was broken as well. The physician also made it a verbal order- meaning it wasn’t in the system and he refused to write an actual medical order. Nurses are instructed to follow a verbal order immediately by a doctor bc it usually indicates an emergency- the doctor was the lazy one

    • @debfox
      @debfox 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@whalefuhk I also heard that the machine where it was dispensed hadn't been working right. Nurses now need to protect themselves and have it all written which is impossible to do during a true emergency, like someone going into anaphylactic shock or someone having a heart attack or stroke!

    • @facemuscles9
      @facemuscles9 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      No disrespect, but if you work in the medical field you’d know how easy it would be to make this mistake with all the safeguards removed. I have to work with more than one person talking to me at a time and their family on hold, angry because I haven’t picked up the phone. There’s only one of us usually doing the job of 4-5 people.

    • @sharayscorner
      @sharayscorner 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@facemuscles9 I appreciate this comment. That's why I wanted to start my comment basically saying the point of view of "someone from the outside looking in". So you're saying it was pretty inevitable for this to happen and would've happened to ANY nurse at that hospital?

  • @laurasteele01
    @laurasteele01 2 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I was so hoping you would cover this!!❤️ I have worked with other nurses who have done this type of thing before!! I can understand once, but this was her second time doing this. She was fired from her previous job for the same exact thing and she had only been a nurse for two years. She’s not the only one a fault here either!

    • @SoManyRandomRamblings
      @SoManyRandomRamblings 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes it is insanely common, and sadly rarely properly addressed.

  • @susanterry3687
    @susanterry3687 2 ปีที่แล้ว +50

    Sad,this happens much more often than we can imagine

    • @Jabo__Jabo
      @Jabo__Jabo 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Oh my goodness. Does it? I hope nurses and doctors will start being prosecuted.

  • @kathleenbueter1272
    @kathleenbueter1272 2 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    Vanderbilt hospital shares the responsibility of what happened to this patient. First they were having problems with the mechanism, second why was vecuronium put in with Versed? Vecuronium is clearly an anesthetic agent. No anesthetic agent should be put in a cabinet with Versed especially right next to Versed.

    • @83RBurke
      @83RBurke 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      In my electronic med cabinet vercuronium is stored in the kit labeled ‘rapid sequence intubation’. There’s no mistaking the danger it poses.

    • @Nan-59
      @Nan-59 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      I agree! Absolutely! That medication should've never been available. And THAT's on the hospital. Nurses are very overworked. The good doctor here says nothing about that.

    • @83RBurke
      @83RBurke 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@Nan-59 there are very few places that members of the general public can enter, kick punch and spit on you, then leave with no consequences. Working in hospitals today is a nightmare. If I had a financial exit strategy I’d be done with this line of work.

    • @detour7790
      @detour7790 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@83RBurke In my cabinet Versed and Vercuronium are not stored together. Our rapid intubation kit is under 2 locks.

    • @cjrrob7336
      @cjrrob7336 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@83RBurke that's your choice, it does not excuse these sloppy behaviors.

  • @RunningInLondon
    @RunningInLondon 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Dr Grande,
    I love this analysis. I would compare a nurse who kills someone with a medication error, and no follow up, to a peace officer/police officer who accidentally shoots someone.
    Yes accidents happen, but there are accidents, and ACCIDENTS, which could basically be prevented, with a slow down and think moment.
    When you choose a career, making yourself responsible for other people's lives, you are then responsible.
    Thank you again for these great analyses.
    Love from (the still snowy) Canada 🇨🇦

    • @RunningInLondon
      @RunningInLondon 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      One further comment. Vanderbilt covering it up most be a common theme.
      Everywhere our local serial killer, Elizabeth Wettlaufer, worked, they covered up her bad behaviour. She was allowed to move from place to place, abuse drugs at work and be caught, make many medication errors which she was fired for, kill 8 people with insulin like it was nothing, injected how many others, and would never have been caught until she voluntarily confessed.
      She never lost her nursing license for all her recorded bad behaviour; although it was suspended once.

  • @robinthrill3r7
    @robinthrill3r7 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Why can't we just have this guy as a jury in all US court cases?
    Good job man 👏 👏

  • @kathleenhebert7757
    @kathleenhebert7757 2 ปีที่แล้ว +37

    When I first heard of this case I did not realize how many of the safety factors she ignored! The truth is nurses override the medication dispenser all the time, especially in critical care areas where you need to have access to drugs the pharmacy has not yet released to the patient profile. I could see how in a hurry she would pull the wrong medication but there are so many red flags past that point that she ignored! The fact that she had to reconstitute that drug is a biggie not to mention not scanning the patient's arm band! There have been times when I have pulled the wrong IV solution or medication and the armband saved me! At the very least that patient should've been on a portable monitor when in the CT scanner! What a terrifying way to die! You are right… Hospitals do hide mistakes! I think criminal prosecution is a good thing!

    • @GoodnightJLH
      @GoodnightJLH 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I agree. An elderly patient on Versed sedation should have at least been on a pulse ox while undergoing a Radiologic procedure.

    • @user-pl1hz8pu1p
      @user-pl1hz8pu1p 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Sooo many nurses are supporting her blindly simply because she is a nurse and so are they. I started doing research on this case, rather than watching Tik Tok videos on the case. Man, she ignored so many red flags. She admitted she was not busy, that this was not urgent. So why did she hurry to give the med? Call pharmacy, have the med verified. I am not perfect. I have had close calls too in my career, but this was extreme. She was an an experienced critical care nurse. So avoidable. She ruined her life. I honestly feel bad for her, but ghis pt died in a horrific way. One lawyer described her death as being burned alive would be the worst way to die, while the second worse way to die is the way this poor woman died.

    • @GoodnightJLH
      @GoodnightJLH 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@user-pl1hz8pu1p
      I know nurses who think she should have lost her license but also think that a manslaughter charge was inappropriate for a medical error. This really is a pivotal case because we have previously seen such cases handled with loss of licensure plus a malpractice settlement. I do agree with this decision but I’m just clarifying because I’ve heard from lots of my nurse friends.

    • @beagledog2001
      @beagledog2001 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I, too, have been saved a few times by scanning the armband as I should.

    • @GoodnightJLH
      @GoodnightJLH 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@beagledog2001
      I saw another video that claimed that there isn’t an armband scanner available in Radiology at that hospital. It was a doc who goes by ZDogg.

  • @franhapner7942
    @franhapner7942 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You are the best commentator on line. Your voice is so expressive and measured, very easy on the nerves no matter how horrible the case. You also have a delightful dry sense of humor. Please keep on commenting on the cases that no one else can make sense of. I am a fan!

  • @stevemcraemanager7119
    @stevemcraemanager7119 2 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    Professional organizations always want to police themselves. And when they mess up. In their mind the ultimate punishment that could ever be handed down is the loss of a license. When you're in the business of holding other people lives in your hand. The ultimate punishment should be criminal prosecution. How many times have you heard police departments repeat the narrative. Just need more or better training? Every incompetent action is blamed on training or procedure. Not personal responsibility.

    • @inkompetenzkompensationsko4188
      @inkompetenzkompensationsko4188 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I agree. If i mess up at my job, i will get prosecuted and rightfully so. If you're handling peoples lifes, the worst thing that could happen is death, not a career change.

    • @stevemcraemanager7119
      @stevemcraemanager7119 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@inkompetenzkompensationsko4188 I totally agree I'm in that position also. If I mess up or if I cover up. I can be criminally prosecuted federally.

    • @doctorshell7118
      @doctorshell7118 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I said the exact same thing.

    • @SoManyRandomRamblings
      @SoManyRandomRamblings 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      They don't do it that way, because over 100,000 patients are killed EVERY YEAR due to medical mistakes, they wouldn't have any staff left if they held people properly accountable.

    • @doctorshell7118
      @doctorshell7118 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@SoManyRandomRamblings I question that statistic.

  • @saratexas5181
    @saratexas5181 2 ปีที่แล้ว +33

    You’re the only “true crime” guy I can really watch! I enjoy learning about people and why they do the things they do, and you’re able to provide the facts without making things extra “spooky”.

    • @TanyaRadic
      @TanyaRadic 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      She is nit a criminal

    • @TanyaRadic
      @TanyaRadic 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      ❤❤She testified 2 hours to TBI without an attorney . The DAused this 2 hr testimony in court against her. Her attorney Peter Strianse was an attorney to a high profile case in 2014 . Vanderbilt football players involved in a gang rape of Vanderbilt coed . Peter Strianse represented Corey Batey in appeal. This was Radondas attorney as well

    • @nouhorni3229
      @nouhorni3229 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I recommend the channel Dire Trip. Very respectful, non-fantastical reporting of darker crimes.

    • @deerlow1851
      @deerlow1851 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@TanyaRadic she is a criminal.

  • @akondofswat209
    @akondofswat209 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Surely being called RaDonda was an important causal factor...

    • @seattlecathy
      @seattlecathy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I wondered about this too. It’s an odd name. I also wondered about the way they treated a 75yo woman. Geriatricians have noted that doctors often discount the value of older patients. Louise Aronson’s book Elderhood recounts a doctor who said he’d have responded sooner to a call if he’d realized the patient was younger. An article in J of Gerontology suggested that nurses are the most ageist of health professionals.

  • @Texaslonestargal
    @Texaslonestargal 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    As a Registered Nurse who has been in this business since 1987, I can tell that you have no idea about conditions in hospitals nor the extreme pressure that nurses are under. I am not defending this nurse’s actions whatsoever. I would like to see a video from you showing the dangerous understaffing of hospitals all over this country. Apparently, the general public has been kept painfully unaware of the national nurse shortage and the dangers associated with the shortage.

    • @user-ci8gj4ex5o
      @user-ci8gj4ex5o 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      It is by design this is happening. Hospitals are big business here and they decide on what is reported. I am positive many politicians and news companies have agreements with these places.

    • @leenz1538
      @leenz1538 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I can't agree more!

    • @jenniferr4364
      @jenniferr4364 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Where is the psychiatric analysis of health care workers being forced to work in understaffed hospitals routinely? Air traffic controlers and preschool teachers have govt mandated stafty ratios. What about the patients? Safe staffing matters for patient safety.

    • @user-ci8gj4ex5o
      @user-ci8gj4ex5o 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@jenniferr4364 corporations run private hospitals and they will squeeze the most work out of healthcare workers without worrying about consequences. It is all about the profits and pleasing their stockholders.

  • @rejaneoliveira5019
    @rejaneoliveira5019 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Dr. Grande, thank you so very much for taking my request! I truly appreciate, and can’t wait to hear what you have to say about this case.
    Thank you!💕

    • @annal7364
      @annal7364 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Oh what a great request, Rejane! This is a case that represents a lot of what I am angry about with unethical conduct in big organizations. Congrats on him doing it; it's a special moment when you see your request in video form in the notifications! 🤩

    • @rejaneoliveira5019
      @rejaneoliveira5019 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@annal7364 Thanks Anna! Yes, this case has the medical community up and arms. Vanderbilt should have owned the responsibility for covering up this, it’s just outrageous.😣

    • @bthomson
      @bthomson 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      💐💐

    • @cottontails9003
      @cottontails9003 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@rejaneoliveira5019 Thank you Rejane, I get so fed up when mistakes like this, are swept under the carpet.

    • @rejaneoliveira5019
      @rejaneoliveira5019 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@cottontails9003 I agree, that’s the worst! Vanderbilt should be held accountable for their mistake as well.

  • @lnc-to4ku
    @lnc-to4ku 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    What a tragic and horrible death, and after listening to your video- what a inexcusable amount of mistakes that were made!
    I so agree with your comment "The RaDonda Vaught case is not a good example of a case that should have been ignored by prosecutors."
    Also really loved your final thoughts, Dr. Grande!

  • @ruetheaterrace8843
    @ruetheaterrace8843 2 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Having been a nurse for 35 years, and later in my career after obtaining a Master's in Education as a nurse educator, the basic standard of care was not met by Ms. Vaught. This filled me full of shock and dismay. I am amazed that she was able to override the warnings, had to mix a powder into a solution, and in spite of that gave the drug. This almost seems intentional to me knowing the safety checks a nurse must go through to administer a drug like. Maybe this woman annoyed her or complained to much, was using the call light in way not acceptable to this nurse. AND, there is the last triple check all of us nurses know: Right drug; Right patient; right route of administration! As you stated she did not give any details. This is not surprising. I have practiced in Idaho, California and now Nevada. The nursing boards associated with those states would not have allowed Ms. Vaught to practice anywhere, in any capacity. What if she passed on her lazy negligence and disregard for safety to underlings 'role modeling' her? The purpose of Nursing Boards is to implement a very intense retraining .Nursing Boards are very strict and they are mean as heck and for good reason; To protect the public. The doctors written orders are sometimes hard to decipher, so call the wring MD and clarify! This is absurd. I do not know all the facts of course, but knowing what I know about BASIC NURSING safety checks, this error is unbelievable!

    • @kitchenskills5427
      @kitchenskills5427 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I am sure that order was entered electronically as nearly all big hospitals has electronic medical records like Epic, which make this mistake even harder to explain.

    • @beagledog2001
      @beagledog2001 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Wow...you are really making some dangerous assumptions here...

    • @anyiethnhial2498
      @anyiethnhial2498 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Honestly your reaching with these assumptions 😬

  • @jenniferwilson9579
    @jenniferwilson9579 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    As a registered nurse, I can tell you that you are taught in nursing school from day one to READ the medication label SEVERAL TIMES before administering any drug. You also have to monitor the patient. She should lose her license at the very least. The hospital needs to be punished for their part. With that said, nurses are often given dangerous patient loads that will cause more errors and neglect. I have no idea if that was also a factor, but this nurse was acting in a dangerous manner.

  • @feiticeiras
    @feiticeiras 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Looking forward to hearing your thoughts on this topic, keep hearing about it nonstop. Thank you, Dr. Grande! 💜

  • @TheSouthIsHot
    @TheSouthIsHot 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    "Do your job well no matter what. Doing it poorly will not make you like it better." And you could possibly cause the death of your customer.

  • @cookie_dough_hangover
    @cookie_dough_hangover 2 ปีที่แล้ว +56

    Dear Dr. Grande, I hope that one day you will analyze the case of a Greek mother, Roula Pispirigou, who is currently facing charges for the murder of her 9 year old daughter, and very soon two other charges will be added for the murders of her two younger children. This whole case is extremely disturbing and it is assumed that the motive is her jealousy and an attempt to keep her husband from leaving her.

    • @elinaanagnostakou2788
      @elinaanagnostakou2788 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      This woman will become a notorious global phenomenon for her passive aggressive cruelty. What a shame for Greece.

    • @cookie_dough_hangover
      @cookie_dough_hangover 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@elinaanagnostakou2788 Absolutely.

    • @andiejoanides9233
      @andiejoanides9233 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Incredibly sad that it’s not been talked about in other countries I’m in the UK 🇬🇧 but hadn’t heard of the case until you suggested it.

    • @ozymandiasnullifidian5590
      @ozymandiasnullifidian5590 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@cookie_dough_hangover Whole Greece is in a state of shock? I understand, Greece is a relatively small country, but I bet that not exactly whole Greece is in shock...

    • @cookie_dough_hangover
      @cookie_dough_hangover 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@ozymandiasnullifidian5590 Really? Are you what ...12?

  • @margolucas3793
    @margolucas3793 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Retired RN here. Every patient needs to have a family member with them at all times ( if at all possible) while hospitalized. Ask what medication is being given. Stay abreast of what medication the patient is to be given. My husband was recently hospitalized. His MD discontinued his blood thinner b/c he was bleeding internally. In comes his nurse about to give the blood thinner! Nurse argued with me that blood thinner had not been discontinued (while my husband was receiving a unit of blood due to the internal bleeding)! I told him (the nurse) to contact the doctor & to squirt that blood thinner down the sink. Nurse was indignant. This hospital made visitors leave at 8:00 PM. Before leaving, I found that nurse at the nursing station. I told him to make certain that the night nurse knew not to give the blood thinner. Be there, & advocate for your loved one! Any good nurse will welcome your concern & work with you to insure safe care for the patient.

  • @amandastein6247
    @amandastein6247 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The suffering the *real* victim went through, slowly dying in that manner, is horrific.

  • @nonprogrediestregredi1711
    @nonprogrediestregredi1711 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    There's a saying that my dad used to use when speaking of doctors: he would say "not all doctors were "A" students in med school". He was, of course, pointing out the incompetence of some in that profession. I believe it applies here also.

    • @SoManyRandomRamblings
      @SoManyRandomRamblings 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      So true. Over 100,000 patients die EVERY YEAR due to medical mistakes, your dad was spot on.

    • @Jabo__Jabo
      @Jabo__Jabo 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yeah. It seems to me she was generally a terrible nurse. I’ve even wondered if she’s just not very bright, or if she were on drugs, or if she’s ADD and can’t focus … nothing, however, nothing excuses her behavior. Unpardonable and reckless.

    • @aheimdahl5201
      @aheimdahl5201 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      True.
      When one goes to see a Doctor (even a Nurse Practitioner) that Patient doesn't know if that Doctor or NP graduated at the top of their Class or at the bottom.
      They are like the Shadetree Mechanics of old - there are some good ones, some bad ones and the rest are mediocre.........

  • @user-cs1un6sp1wRennata
    @user-cs1un6sp1wRennata 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Brilliant analysis Dr. Grande! Thank you for sharing your thoughts on this particular case!

  • @patriciatate2470
    @patriciatate2470 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    If she had administered a non lethal drug by mistake--no harm no foul. Same mistake but no repercussions. . What is to be gained by putting her in prison--she no longer has a nursing license so she is no danger to the public.. This is a bad precedent--it's the rare doctor, paramedic, EMT or nurse that on a busy, stressful shift has not made a mistake. Do they all need to purchase individual malpractice insurance and drive the cost of health care even higher. I posit that if the hospital and nursing board had done their job-i.e immediate investigation and disciplinary action, including revoking her license, the person who likely felt like RaDonda got away with this mistake and turned her in, would have felt like something had been done and wouldn't have taken that step. Happens all the time.

  • @averagebodybuilder
    @averagebodybuilder 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    It is interesting to note that she always admitted making the mistake.

    • @rubyoro0
      @rubyoro0 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      She had to, otherwise she would have been labeled a “death angel”.

    • @averagebodybuilder
      @averagebodybuilder 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@rubyoro0 you don't know her intentions. She was wrong. And openly admitted.

  • @staellie7089
    @staellie7089 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I read a lot of comments. I’m not in the medical field, but I am convinced this was a case of gross negligence!! Plain and simple.

  • @cardo1111
    @cardo1111 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    It's unfortunate but doctors/hospitals often bury their mistakes. We put healthcare professionals on such a high pedestal that we often have blinders on and don't do our due diligence researching doctors, surgeons, hospitals...If this patient had no family this likely would have been brushed under the rug. I do have respect for healthcare workers and doctors and realize they can often save lives and help improve our quality of life. However they are human, make mistakes, can be impacted by stress and some are more skilled than others.

    • @SoManyRandomRamblings
      @SoManyRandomRamblings 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Exactly, this!!! Over 100,000 patients die EVERY YEAR due to medical mistakes.

  • @chocolatethunder192
    @chocolatethunder192 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is the best discussion of this situation I've heard. Another great video, Dr. Grande!

  • @dylswife8048
    @dylswife8048 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Harm reduction is taught early in nursing school. There is a protocol called the 5 rights that nurses must check before administering ANY medication. RIGHT drug, RIGHT patient, RIGHT dose, RIGHT route and RIGHT time. It was the nurses responsibility to check these things. She did not and yes, she is guilty. What a horrific death for the patient! I say this as a nurse with 40 years experience.

  • @debrarolland1704
    @debrarolland1704 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I have some thoughts on this. First I would say that what is good for the Goose is good for the Gander. I have personally seen things that Doctors have done that ruined a patient's life but lawyers say that it is impossible to sue the bar is too high. Another thing is that not all organizations cover this type of thing up but they are Very willing to throw the nurse under the bus when there are many flaws in the way they operate which led to the mistakes. Number one is insufficient staffing compared to the patient load.

  • @ELvis348
    @ELvis348 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I admire how you articulate the facts and explain the terms in an organized concise manner in simple terms and of course with that bit of sarcasm to lighten things up. I also appreciate how you share your thought analysis at the end to provide moral perspective. Your platform is a great service to many in understanding “the system” and human nature. You’re right this was a very sad case of lacking principles and accountability for the nurse and organization

    • @ELvis348
      @ELvis348 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      You are so Awesome 🤩 Dr. Grande! Thank you for all you do!

  • @Flamsterette
    @Flamsterette 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thanks for the analysis, Dr. Grande!

  • @nightheron5892
    @nightheron5892 2 ปีที่แล้ว +26

    Doctors are given far more professional leverage in “negligence” situations. They get a pay to play via insurance payouts when they fuck up. This is a labor inequality issue.

    • @moecuspocus
      @moecuspocus 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      💯 Do you know how many patients don't get the care they need because insurance doesn't cover it and doctors are forced to find ways around that. In most cases that leads to the patient not getting the proper care that they needed. I don't know why insurance gets to be the deciding factor on what treatment you receive. It's all about money. It's going to take the top guy to the bottom guy to fix this.

    • @user-ci8gj4ex5o
      @user-ci8gj4ex5o 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@moecuspocus because of capitalism.

    • @AMM3.
      @AMM3. 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@moecuspocus universal healthcare would fix it

    • @moecuspocus
      @moecuspocus 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@AMM3. I agree

    • @AMM3.
      @AMM3. 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      The worst part about dealing with doctors is they are usually too arrogant to admit they made a mistake... Or God forbid a less educated person correct them, even though that person may have more work experience in that particular area.
      I work in the medical field, trying to give doctors advice or correct them is often a losing battle

  • @EssenceBennett
    @EssenceBennett 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    i'm a nurse and i do sympathize with her and the situation with the hospital system. but this is precisely why we cannot rely on technology to do our 3 med checks. i wish the situation was different all around though.

    • @jupeter24
      @jupeter24 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      God bless your work!! Nurses are such unsung heroes.

    • @criticRN
      @criticRN 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I agree. I’m sure I’ve made some mistakes in my career… but this is a serious drug - triple check and an independent double check are required! She was reckless.

  • @ramair6424
    @ramair6424 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    It is clear the nurse’s organization, and others opposed to this prosecution, are concerned that criminal charges in cases such as these will place those in the medical community on the proverbial “slippery slope.” The facts of this particular case are so egregious and indicate a such a gross deviation from the standard of care as to justify the charges and the outcome. It is up to all of us to insure that the justice system reserves such action only for incidents of this magnitude.

  • @margin606
    @margin606 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent reporting and analysis!

  • @jonmason9360
    @jonmason9360 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Powerful and thorough analysis.
    Love the work you do!

  • @rullmourn1142
    @rullmourn1142 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    It only takes a second or two to double-check that you have the correct medication. She was grossly negligent in what she did. My mom was a head nurse for twenty years, so I am familiar with proper procedures. She should have read the vial out loud to herself, and again when telling the patient what its name is and what it's for.

  • @olgaforeman114
    @olgaforeman114 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    The nurse did not cover up her actions at any point. She admitted her mistake to charge nurse immediately, as code blue was called overhead. If she did not say anything, no one would ever know, paralytics dissipate quickly, there would be no reason to suspect anything. Literally, the ONLY REASON this is know is because she admitted her mistake immediately. As for the monitoring the patient, she was told to leave by the MRI personnel, she was told that they would monitor the patient. Also, the only way to truly monitor patient in MRI is to have patient hooked up to MRI compatible equipment that can stay inside the room. If patient did not arrive on transport monitor (as ICU patients are always travel with ICU RN & monitor + the drips), it is not a routine practice to place patient on the monitor, even if meds are given. The hospital cover it up, even when nurse told the truth and admitted her mistake immediately. Mistaking one med for the other, holly sh!t, they are nothing alike, it does not even say Versed on the bottle, it midazolam. The hospital does not even get a slap on the wrist for this cover up! She made a mistake, admitted to making mistake, paid for it with her job & license, and now prison time, but ever happened to the hospital? Maybe, just maybe, someone should look into how they operate, maybe find a few doctors who made a fatal mistake, and absolutely nothing happened as a consequence.

    • @dicedrice7216
      @dicedrice7216 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You've made some excellent points that no one else has mentioned.

    • @chocolatethunder192
      @chocolatethunder192 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      She didn't admit it right away, though. And she didn't just make a mistake (or even two) -- she made a series of surprisingly negligent decisions. The machine warned her like 8 times and the medicine label had a big "paralytic medication" warning on it. She then left the patient alone to die an excruciating death. The hospital behaved horribly, too, and I think those administrators and doctors who covered this up should also go to jail. The whole thing's a mess, but the nurse earned the jail time and license revocation. No way would you want her taking care of your family members, I'm sure.

    • @SoManyRandomRamblings
      @SoManyRandomRamblings 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I am certain there are multiple that have been swept under the rug.

    • @olgaforeman114
      @olgaforeman114 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@chocolatethunder192 yes, she made multiple mistakes, as an ICU RN, I am very concerned over giving "whatever" & leaving, even she was told to leave by MRI staff. She was not assigned to the this patient, she was "floating" & had an orient with her. Typically, very few things can safely go inside MRI bay room, med scanner is not one of them, it will get pulled into the MRI & the whole things will have to be shut down for very long time... The only time to scan patient's bracelet is prior to the start of the procedure, in the hall. Regardless, this facility did not even had the scanners there in MRI. But big fat letters on the cap & label should have been a warning. I am not justifying her actions, but I thing she should not be THE ONLY ONE paying for the system failure, lack of check points in the process, not to mentions the whole hospital cover up, including multiple medical professionals, doctors & administrators. As it stands right now, she is being made an example & a scape goat.

  • @kristinaherrejon7181
    @kristinaherrejon7181 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Very good analysis Dr Grande!

  • @derekwalters4980
    @derekwalters4980 2 ปีที่แล้ว +28

    When I first heard you talk about this, I was thinking that, yes, the nurse made an error however she did go to the hospital administration and admit her mistakes and that, imo, it was the hospital staff who were "criminal" in their intent and behavior, not the nurse. To some extend, in the process of reporting I still believe that to be true. The nurse did not attempt to hide her "mistake". Boy, at the end, when you hear the series of "mistakes" you realize there comes a point where it is no longer a mistakes, but rather just gross incompetence! There should be a requirement that it takes 2 people to override the safety measures in place. This just should never have happened, but to make things even worse, imo, is the behavior in hiding the truth from authorities, and their responsibility to report these things. It was the hospitals decision to lies and cover up (criminal imo) the truth of this whole thing. If she hadn't have left her alone, and seen the patient couldn't breath, could the patient have been saves? Could she have been put on a respirator? Did the patient have to die? This is all horribly inexcusable, and hope that the decision makers in this case are also brought to justice. Seems anymore in business, if profit is the end game, it appears to be acceptable to lies, and expected in most cases. Look at our own political leaders of our country. They outright lie with impunity all the time. It makes me sick.

    • @garlicgirl3149
      @garlicgirl3149 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I heard there is suppose to be a 2 people but not sure why it was not used there.

  • @kimberlygilliam6112
    @kimberlygilliam6112 2 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    I’m not sure to what extent these exculpatory factors are applicable in this case, but are common issues in hospitals: How long was her shift that day, how long had she gone without a break, how much overtime was she regularly working, what was her patient load, how much support and oversight did she have, what was the culture like at Vanderbilt, etc? The fact that she admitted the mistake immediately should have been considered. She should absolutely have her license taken away, but I don’t know that she deserves jail time. Vanderbilt should also face sanctions, fines, etc. and maybe have their accreditations suspended or revoked.

    • @cottontails9003
      @cottontails9003 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Kimberly, the excuses you're making should not apply to nursing, if you have any of those, you should go home, our main aim is duty of care.

    • @kimberlygilliam6112
      @kimberlygilliam6112 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@cottontails9003 I’m not sure where you live, but in much of the US, these issues are common and have been made worse by the pandemic.

  • @beccac6812
    @beccac6812 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I have watched med errors happen at a hospital. None that were fatal but , it does happen. When it did, the nurse reported it: the hospital l had a meeting and created new measures to check the medications between the doctors, pharmacy and nursing : and then trained all the nurses on this potential error so that it won’t happen again. That is how mistakes should be managed: review the issue, find out what caused it, prevent it from happening again. Not ignore it. Not brush it under the rug. Because ALL of us will be in a hospital bed someday and we have to know we are safe.

  • @daisygirl1027
    @daisygirl1027 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I am a registered nurse, and while it's inevitable to make some medication errors during a career, this particular set of events is horrifying. most people outside of the hospital don't know that the number of medication errors nurses CATCH on doctors' orders is astonishing, and no one is talking about this. we find an error, call the doctor, and give him/her the opportunity to self correct. the nursing board should have taken away her license from the start, but criminal charges?? if we go down this rabbit hole, nurses may not self report medication errors, which makes everyone much less safe.

  • @kevinconnor3187
    @kevinconnor3187 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    A person off the street with zero medical training wouldn’t make this kind of mistake.

  • @floratink
    @floratink 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I’m a little halfway through your book Harm Reduction and i am hooked! 😃You’re really good at True Crime/Fiction writing!

  • @5pid3rman80
    @5pid3rman80 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I'm in the nursing field and I was just made aware of this case a couple of weeks ago... but, yeah, trading versed for vecuronium is a sentinel event: one which results in grievous harm or death due to neglect of safety protocols, it's sobering, but we exercise the 5 rights of med administration for a reason (right patient, right medication, right dose, right route, right time)... adhering to these would've prevented this...

  • @missewe
    @missewe 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for covering this Dr. Grande 👍

  • @Taluta394
    @Taluta394 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Poor Charlene … killed by a nurse who made multiple mistakes. Thank you for bringing these details to light.

  • @pedinurse1
    @pedinurse1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Dr.Grande the paralyzing agent should never have been in a dispensing system. That was the biggest error.. This agent should have been locked up in a different cabinet because this agent only belongs in the operating room.!!!!!!!!! It should never have been there especially if there are meds that sound alike. So thats why all the safety mechanisms didnt work. In our hospital these kinds of meds are never in the dispensing system and cannot be administered by an RN no matter what unless a doctor is present and there is a second nurse verifying the med. So the hospital was guilty because it did not prevent a nurse that was "out of it" to make this horrifying mistake.
    The med should NEVER have been available to her.Yes she is guilty of simply not reading the name of the med. We have been taught to RELY on these dispensing machines. As an older RN we were taught to read the name of med on the vial three times especially a drug like this. All around not enough checks to prevent this deadly error. All RNS make mistakes due to the fast pace , the patients screaming for pain med. At this point you have to take a breath and STOP, Read the name, verify it then proceed.This mistake could have happened to anyone.Look up the case of the twins that were given a very high dose of heparin and how all of that went down. It happens to a Hollywood actor. The babies did survive.

  • @babygirl1755
    @babygirl1755 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    2 seconds to READ the vial was all it would've taken for this to not have happened. This "nurse" was training someone that day too. Training them how to override the system, give the wrong med, kill someone and blame everything and everyone but yourself because you were so cocky and knew everything but couldn't READ a med vial. There is absolutely no excuse for this. She killed someone and I'm more mad about all the nurses and hospital staff that think she should get away with it. Drug dealers get charged for unknowingly selling the wrong drug that killed people that wanted to take said drugs. A nurse is held at a higher standard than anyone else and their job is to READ med vials first.

    • @dangremillion
      @dangremillion 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      One cannot rely on Nurses to understand the complexities of law. Rhonda had her day in court and the jury spoke. That is the way the system works. The jury heard both sides and made a decision of guilty.

  • @melissafox6826
    @melissafox6826 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    As a nurse that has been practicing for 23 years I 100% agree with your assessment. This was not just a mistake - this was an entire tragedy preventable errors. This case demonstrates that there is a threshold by which punishment from a licensing board is just not adequate. The most unforgivable part is her refusal to assess the patient after giving what she thought at the time was a powerful sedative. Vecuronium starts working in less than a minute and takes 3-5 mins to reach full effectiveness. Giving a medication IV push should take at least one minute. The fact that she did not notice a change in the patient status tells me that she slammed the med in the patient and just walked out. 3 minutes in the room with this patient would have been enough to see the distress and call the code. 3 minutes. She didn’t just make a mistake - she walked out on a patient at their most vulnerable. The verdict was deserved. Any nurse that wants to leave the profession based on this decision is welcome to do so. We don’t need nurses like this or nurses who are willing to excuse this type of negligence.

  • @ellenthom34
    @ellenthom34 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Congratulations on exceeding 1,000,000. I was an early subscriber and just knew you scientific, informed calm and impartial posts would gain a wide audience.

  • @corinnefogarty7880
    @corinnefogarty7880 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    First clue about how shady a hospital is, is the non-disclosure agreement they want you to sign to not rat them out for incompetence.
    I am glad they were exposed.

  • @roubinamalayan7548
    @roubinamalayan7548 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    When a serious error happens to a patient in a medical institution, it is not the result of one individual. It is the result of the system where a group of people are at fault. Basically more than one individual dropped the Ball. But whoever is the weakest among the link gets the blame .Being overworked ex accepting a heavy assignment due to low staffing ratios, increases the chance of errors in a hospital work environment. What kind of punishment did the unit director or shift supervisor get for this error? any idea? No one talks about the administrative staff.
    Thank you Dr. Grande for focusing on this interesting case.

  • @radedemenes
    @radedemenes 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As a practicing nurse i completely agree with the point of view presented in the video. Someone who is capable of making a series of such errors should not be a nurse, especially an ICU nurse where patients are particularly vulnerable.

  • @KM-hd1vz
    @KM-hd1vz 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    As a nurse and as many of the nurses in the comments have said, the precedent being set here is dangerous. I fully agree she should’ve lost her license and was negligent. Nurses are human-imperfect people working in a very imperfect system. The responsibility cannot lie solely with the nurse when there were clearly multiple system failures that contributed to the mistake. Mistakes are inevitable and it’s true that the stakes in a healthcare environment are much higher. That’s why we have channels for reporting errors that are supposed to lead to a proper investigation, identification of the causes, and putting new systems in place to prevent them. Here there’s a nurse who reported herself and tried to go through those channels. Where is the responsibility of the hospital system being addressed? How did this get swept under the rug? Those are the questions of consequence here. Now more than ever, hospitals are pushing nurses to work in unsafe conditions with unsafe staffing ratios yet we’re still held to the same unrealistic standard that mistakes are not acceptable.