What if.....your Director has falsified his credentials?

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I have an unusual problem, that I hope someone can help me with. In the past year, our hospital has had an influx of nurses of all types: travelers, agency nurses, per diems, etc. and our hospital was also recently taken over by a well known corporation which buys up small community hospitals. During the course of the takeover, the Director of our Unit gave her resignation. It was difficult to find a replacement, but eventually a traveling nurse who had worked in other departments was hired to become the director. Recently, a fellow nurse discovered that our Director, who has now been on board nearly a year, is not listed as having a license with our state. In addition, he does not have a certification for CCRN, according to the AACN listings, however he signs all his memos with RN, CCRN, etc. and he also wears that title on his name badge. I would be inclined to forget about this, but now it is starting to worry me. Is it possible that nurses from other states somehow can slip through the cracks so that their history doesn't follow them? Can my hospital be sued in some way by patients who discover this? I don't want to be fired myself, but I want to be able to trust the integrity of the Director.

Specializes in Trauma Surgical ICU.

Like others have stated, if you are in a compact state his/her name will not appear unless they declare that state their permanent residence..

Ex: a friend of mine is from a compact state and is currently working in another compact state, if you search their name in the current states' BON, you wont find it..

Specializes in Oncology; medical specialty website.
What made you guys decide to look him up anyway? Do you go looking up everybody your associated with to make sure they are an rn? Seems like you have ulterior motives .

​I've seen posts like this before and have always wondered the same thing.

You always need a license in the state you are working, just some states are compact states so you are licensed there by default of being licensed elsewhere. OP, is your state one of the compact states for RN licenses?

Not necessarily.

If it's a federal facility you can use a license from any state.

Specializes in critcal care, CRNA.
I have an unusual problem that I hope someone can help me with. In the past year, our hospital has had an influx of nurses of all types: travelers, agency nurses, per diems, etc. and our hospital was also recently taken over by a well known corporation which buys up small community hospitals. During the course of the takeover, the Director of our Unit gave her resignation. It was difficult to find a replacement, but eventually a traveling nurse who had worked in other departments was hired to become the director. Recently, a fellow nurse discovered that our Director, who has now been on board nearly a year, is not listed as having a license with our state. In addition, he does not have a certification for CCRN, according to the AACN listings, however he signs all his memos with RN, CCRN, etc. and he also wears that title on his name badge. I would be inclined to forget about this, but now it is starting to worry me. Is it possible that nurses from other states somehow can slip through the cracks so that their history doesn't follow them? Can my hospital be sued in some way by patients who discover this? I don't want to be fired myself, but I want to be able to trust the integrity of the Director.[/quote']

What state are you in?

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.
I have an unusual problem, that I hope someone can help me with. In the past year, our hospital has had an influx of nurses of all types: travelers, agency nurses, per diems, etc. and our hospital was also recently taken over by a well known corporation which buys up small community hospitals. During the course of the takeover, the Director of our Unit gave her resignation. It was difficult to find a replacement, but eventually a traveling nurse who had worked in other departments was hired to become the director. Recently, a fellow nurse discovered that our Director, who has now been on board nearly a year, is not listed as having a license with our state. In addition, he does not have a certification for CCRN, according to the AACN listings, however he signs all his memos with RN, CCRN, etc. and he also wears that title on his name badge. I would be inclined to forget about this, but now it is starting to worry me. Is it possible that nurses from other states somehow can slip through the cracks so that their history doesn't follow them? Can my hospital be sued in some way by patients who discover this? I don't want to be fired myself, but I want to be able to trust the integrity of the Director.

I think you need to tread lightly...I think you need to examine what made you all look and be prepared for consequences if you question and you are wrong.....if you are in a compact state his licensing may be pending .....HR's are pretty careful these days and pretty savy utilizing social media to sniff out in appropriate hires. If you do decide to "out him" I would do it through corporate compliance....which is NEVER completely anonymous.....or report his name to the BON of your state andshare with them your concerns.

Specializes in Psych, Corrections, Med-Surg, Ambulatory.

This one should be very easy and no risk. You can make an anonymous call to your state board of nursing and pass on your concerns. You don't need proof, but it helps to state why you are concerned. It is illegal to present yourself as a nurse without valid credentials. The BON will then conduct their own investigation. It will then be their responsibility to notify the hospital that their director is practicing without a license, if he really is. There should be no repercussion for calling the board of nursing in good faith. It is your right and responsibility to do this.

Hope this helps. Good luck.

Specializes in Public Health, DEI.

Honestly, I'd be amazed if he turns out to be unlicensed. I guess that it could happen, but HR departments tend to perform due diligence on these matters. I'd be much more inclined to believe there's a logical explanation.

I do appreciate all the responses. To clarify: this is not gossip around the water cooler. A new nurse went to the Board of Nursing site to check to see her own listing for expiration date. She absentmindedly decided to check the director's name, and there is no listing. We are not a compact state and the director is not from a compact state. There is no "ulterior motive" here. The Director is a nice person - however, the Director also does not show up on AACN as having CCRN certification, which is also claimed. These are facts. Maybe there is an explanation, so I think we should follow the wise advice that has been given, and leave it to the hotline folks, anonymously. We don't have time for this, our concern is that our hospital is safe from lawsuit. This is not a large facility, and I am not sure who in HR checks on licensing. This nurse came through a traveling nurse agency into our hospital, and then applied for the director position. Thank you to everyone who posted. I appreciate your help.

It's not a compact state.

I appreciate this information, but it is not a federal facility. Small community hospital.

Specializes in critcal care, CRNA.
I appreciate this information but it is not a federal facility. Small community hospital.[/quote']

Then they must have a license if they did indeed work as a traveler there.

No, no one has time for that. This is a valid concern.

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