Dr D RichParticipant“Nursing”30 something nurses present during...

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    Dr D Rich
    Participant
    “Nursing”

    30 something nurses present during the killing but only “two registered nurses” listed as defendants in the case.
    Miker?? ‘splain

    Nurses will gang up on a doctor they feel “threatened” by, but 30-something don’t know how to stop a DNR from being executed in the execution of a hospitalized person.

    I guess those defendants knew how to get along well in the workplace and now they’re being defended well by the corporation. Why hasn’t the CEO and CNO chief nursing officer thrown those malignant monstrous employee nurses under the bus within JCAHO Patients Come First Policy.
    Miker???? “Splain??

    Vander Heiden responded to testimony last week by defendant Hollee McInnis, an Ascension nurse who provided care for Grace, that patients with a DNR order are typically fitted with a purple wristband denoting their DNR status. McInnis testified that she did not recall whether Grace wore such a wristband. Vander Heiden said her sister was not wearing a purple wristband.


    According to Vander Heiden, when she found out about the DNR order, hospital staff told her that “they could not do anything about it.”

    “A nurse read off the computer screen that the doctor had labeled her ‘Do Not Resuscitate’ and they claimed they could not do anything about it,” Vander Heiden said.

    As Grace’s condition declined shortly before her death, Vander Heiden said she and Grace’s parents, who were connected on FaceTime, “were pleading, screaming, yelling” for hospital staff to revoke the DNR.

    “It actually went on for almost 10 full minutes, trying to get someone to help save her, and no one stepped in that room,” Vander Heiden testified. “They literally stood outside Grace’s room stationary. They would not move.”

    This was despite the presence of “roughly 30-plus nurses” in the hallway outside Grace’s room, Vander Heiden said.

    During this time, and up to Grace’s death, Vander Heiden said McInnis was nowhere to be found — nor was Dr. Gavin Shokar, a defendant who was the primary physician in charge of Grace’s care. Last week, McInnis testified that she was treating no other patients at the time.

    “Nowhere to be found” as absence is the best cover your ass policy on hospitals and the court officers, judges n attorneys, dig it since absence makes their work simpler.

    “30 plus ““Nurses”

 
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