In April of 2018, Carolyn Strom lost her court appeal against her BON, who arbitrarily disciplined her for comments she made about the care her dying grandfather received while residing in a care facility. The case sets a precedent that will allow BONs and other regulatory bodies of other disciplines to arbitrarily restrict a member's freedom of expression.
Just over a year ago, in April of 2018, RN Carolyn Strom lost her court appeal contesting disciplinary action that was taken by her regulatory body (the Saskatchewan Registered Nurses Association “SRNA”) for a comment she posted on Facebook about the care her dying grandfather received in a hospital.
“My Grandfather spent a week in “Palliative Care” before he died and after hearing about his and my family’s experience there (@ St. Joseph’s Health Facility in Macklin, SK) it is evident that Not Everyone is “up to speed” on how to approach end of life care ... Or how to help maintain an Ageing Senior’s Dignity (among other things!) So ... I challenge the people involved in decision making with that facility, to please get All Your Staff a refresher on the topic AND More.
Don’t get me wrong, “some” people have provided excellent care so I thank you so very much for YOUR efforts, but to those who made Grandpa’s last years less than desirable, Please Do Better Next Time! My Grandmother has chosen to stay in your facility, so here is your chance to treat her “like you would want your own family member to be treated”.
That’s All I Ask!
And a caution to anyone that has loved ones at the facility mentioned above: keep an eye on things and report anything you Do Not Like! That’s the only way to get some things to change.
(I’m glad the column reference below surfaced, because it has given me a way to segway into this topic.)
The fact that I have to ask people, who work in health care, to take a step back and be more compassionate, saddens me more than you know”
While Strom was not employed by the facility and was, in fact, not practicing nursing at all (she was on maternity leave), the nurses at the care facility took notice to these comments and filed a formal complaint against Strom with the SRNA. The SRNA launched an investigation and found Strom guilty of professional misconduct, namely that Strom engaged in “conduct that is contrary to the best interests of the public or nurses or tends to harm the standing of the profession of nursing” and “not following the proper channels”.
Strom appealed this decision to the Court of Queen’s Bench for Saskatchewan where Currie, J. upheld the administrative decision of the SRNA. In his judgement, Currie, J. holds that the judgement by the SRNA was “reasonable” and ordered Strom to pay the costs of the investigation, as well as a disciplinary penalty totaling $26,000 CAD.
It is likely that Strom will appeal this decision; however, as it stands now, this rests as valid case law and sets a precedent for nurses to be charged and disciplined for “off-duty” misconducts.
The precedent set in this case permits a regulatory body (such as a BON) to limit one’s constitutional right to freedom of expression. In his judgement, Currie, J. acknowledges that this was a breach of Strom’s constitutional rights to freedom of expression, but holds that, so long as a regulatory body “proportionately balanced the right to freedom of expression with the objectives of the [Nursing Act], in the context of Ms. Strom’s circumstances”, it is acceptable to limit freedom of expression. Currie, J. goes on to state that “The [SRNA’s] balancing of the rights and objectives is not required to be correct. It is required to be reasonable.”
So what makes it reasonable? Currie, J. holds that the decision was reasonable because Ms. Strom was granted other avenues of expression, namely, she was able to report the nurses providing inadequate care to the SRNA or the hospital administration. This is in fact what is recommended in the code put forth by the SRNA.
While Currie, J. holds that Ms. Strom was able to express herself in other avenues, he ignores holdings from previous case law where the form of expression (or the avenue chosen for expression) can only be limited if the location or method of expression removes the protection of freedom of expression (see: Montréal (City) v. 2952-1366 Québec Inc., [2005] 3 S.C.R. 141;). While Currie, J. and the SRNA holds that Ms. Strom should have followed the methods outlined in the Code, Currie, J. and the SRNA did not apply the test as outlined in the case of Montreal v 2952-1366, where the method or location of expression can only be limited if it conflicts with one of the three values of freedom of expression (i.e. Self-fulfillment, truth-finding and/or democratic discourse). Currie, J. and the SRNA omitting this vital aspect of freedom of expression analysis has paved the way for bad precedent. Therefore, Currie, J. did not address whether the SRNA could in fact limit one's freedom of expression by law, as this step of the analysis was overlooked.
We now have this precedent standing that will for sure give a carte blanche to regulatory bodies to arbitrarily discipline their members for expressing anything that the regulatory body opposes. This will only hamper the ability of professionals (the ones arguably best suited to advocate for change in a system they are fluent in) to advocate for change and to speak out against bad public policy and other ill-doings, for risk of being reprimanded by their regulatory bodies.
On 7/25/2019 at 3:01 PM, no.intervention.required said:Wow, she was expressing her opinion as a family member. She did not work in the facility. Since when nurses cannot express opinions about their loved one's care?
But, she should have avoided writing the opinion on facebook.
Here is the principal point, IMO. Had she just made verbal statements to that effect, this probably would not have happened. However, when she went public in an easily accessible forum in her criticism of colleagues, she crossed the line. Freedom of speech, especially within a licensed profession, doesn't mean the ability to say anything anywhere. Maybe I am in the minority here, but I understand the actions taken by her nursing board.
On 7/28/2019 at 11:09 AM, Dianna Marie Garza said:She caused so much negative backlash for.the staff that several of them recieved threats, a number of the staff left their jobs and the stress levels of this event has caused physical injury.
I would like more information about this; maybe I will change my opinion. What kind of threats and from whom? Absent proof of these terrible threats, the idea that Ms. Strom's comments themselves caused any degree of severe stress levels seems indicative of way bigger problems than Ms. Strom poses. That such commentary written on Fakebook of all places (and not even particularly well-written) would cause such havoc is just ridiculous.
Given all the regulatory body's concern about professional nurses' obligations and the ways in which they should conduct themselves, it seems reasonable to expect that, in this situation, there would have been at least some acknowledgment of any grief or processing of her grandfather's death that may have played a role in Ms. Strom's actions. It is not right to consider her actions only in the context of how a professional nurse should behave, even though she identified herself as an RN in her comments. Their reaction to her comments has this somewhat "Pot, meet Kettle" twist to it.
https://www.canlii.org/en/sk/skqb/doc/2018/2018skqb110/2018skqb110.html
I think this is a major overreach. Several of the points upon which they critiqued her actions are taken completely out of their intended context and misapplied in this situation - - with the predictable result of sensationalizing (what we know of) her actual actions.
What's worse: This idea that the appeals court isn't required to review the elements involved in the decision by the regulatory body, but rather just its final conclusion. The majority of the the board's specific critiques IMO are where the problem lies.
And $26K for any of this is outrageous.
However, in this country the employer just would have terminated if they didn't like what was written on FB. And depending on who and how, it may have been way more costly than $26K.
On 7/26/2019 at 5:58 AM, Hoosier_RN said:Every employer that I have worked for, in Indiana, has a policy that states no firearms, period. It will lead to automatic termination and report to the state BON. I have a permit to carry. Doesn't matter, I'd still be fired if I had one in my vehicle on the property. As far as I know, every one of those facilities have signs of no firearms on premises except law enforcement. So, perhaps that was part of that scenario. The third with the teacher, that was a bonehead move. Anyone could have grabbed that kid, an out of control vehicle could have harmed. She did deserve that. Common sense...
Uh, totally disagree. This is the whole safety vs liberty issue. 1) I can’t blame any employer for firing an employee for not following their rules. So if they had a no fire arms policy then she deserved to get fired. She DID NOT deserve to have the BON do anything to her license unless she was illegal by state law. 2) Anything to happen to any kid at anytime. Kid needed a hard lesson. The lack of hard lessons are why we have so many incapable adults. There are always some risks of harm with hard lessons. It is NOT abuse to put your kid a minor risk to drive home a hard lesson. it is MY liberty as a parent to choose what lessons need to be driven home. She was that kid’s mom, not it’s teacher. HUGE difference. Other people don’t get to put your kid at risk, but you do. (Although I think to some extent other adults should be able to put other’s kids at minor risk.) That teacher should sue the board.
Be very careful of your so-called co-workers that send you friend request on social media. They will be the one to screen-shot your post and send to administration if you have a fall out. In my opinion, you can express your opinion on your own "private" facebook page with friend and family but once you start adding "friends" from work, then ....well, I wish you luck ( Start looking for a new job)
On 8/13/2019 at 6:49 PM, Orca said:Here is the principal point, IMO. Had she just made verbal statements to that effect, this probably would not have happened. However, when she went public in an easily accessible forum in her criticism of colleagues, she crossed the line. Freedom of speech, especially within a licensed profession, doesn't mean the ability to say anything anywhere. Maybe I am in the minority here, but I understand the actions taken by her nursing board.
Totally wrong. The BON was not the appropriate place for this case to be handled. This is an issue of defamation which should have been carried out in a court of law. This is not professional misconduct against nurses. She did not call out a particular person, she stated her dissatisfaction at the training and lack of care that staff provided her family member. We should be allowed to speak out against poor service if we are the one’s receiving the service. Totally out of line and she should have won this appeal. My opinion is she should now sue the BON for over stepping their boundaries as a professional organization and impeding her rights as a citizen and consumer.
Purely another example of left-right political socialism in countries like Canada which unfortunately often get what they asked for in the end. Yes the remaining few democracies like America should take note, although the world-wide policing of social media has already clearly begun. Canada has much greater woes with respect to speech restriction, with more recent forced gender identification and personal pronoun assignment (Bill C-16).
Personally, I identify with the late great Michael Jackson, and prefer "Hee-Hee".
Less I too, be offended.
1. Freedom of speech in public places. But, use your judgement. We're all accountable for our mouth and even the future unintended consequence of using it we didn't foresee.
2. You have less freedom of speech in your workplace. Policies and such.
3. Invest in malpractice insurance. The BON is not your friend.
Forest2
625 Posts
I've seen it over and over again, people getting into trouble over what they write on FB. When will people learn to avoid it if at all possible. You open yourself up to judgement by everyone who reads your comments.