ICU Nurse Fired For Refusing 3rd Patient

Nurse Julie Griffin was fired for standing up for what she thought was the right thing. Nurses General Nursing News

At Westside Regional Medical Center in Plantation, Florida, ICU nurse Julie Griffin worked in the 12 bed cardiovascular ICU (CVICU.) Until she was fired for refusing to take a third patient.

Westside Regional Medical Center is part of HCA Healthcare. HCA Healthcare is the largest for-profit hospital chain in the U.S., owning over 150 hospitals, and earning over 47 billion in 2018.

Unmonitored Patients

One of Julie's concerns for patient safety was that the in-room monitors provided for a split screen display. This allows for an ICU nurse to be in one of her patient's rooms, set the monitor for a 2-view display, and be able to monitor her second patient. The problem? It does not allow for a 3-way display. If the ICU nurse has 3 patients, one of those patients will not be monitored.

In an interview with Hospital Watchdog, Julie Griffin explained that there is a standing order for all ICU patients to receive continuous monitoring, and nurses must electronically attest to the fact that the standard of care was met. HCA CVICU does not staff a qualified monitor tech at the nurses station where the central bank of patient monitors display. If all the nurses are away from the station providing patient care and an unmonitored patient goes into a lethal rhythm, there is no one to see it. An alarm would sound, but there are constant alarms in CVICU that compete for a nurse's attention. Alarms cannot be relied upon as a substitute for a nurse.

Hospital Watchdog reports that 2 such unmonitored patients have died. Allegedly, one of the patients was discovered dead and may have been dead for up to 30 minutes. A family member went out to the nurses station to report that something was wrong.

In the other case, allegedly the nurse was assigned 3 patients, was able to monitor only 2 of them, and the 3rd patient died of pulmonary problems, possible a pulmonary embolism (PE).

Hospital Watchdog qualifies the above cases saying they are not substantiated with medical records or other documentation, they are reported by nurse Julie Griffin in an interview.

Whistle-Blower

Julie says all of her colleagues shared her concern about patient safety and lack of monitoring, but they were afraid to speak up. They needed to keep their jobs in order to support their families. Julie, previously in the Navy, believed in following the chain-of-command. She reported unsafe patient conditions to her charge nurses and manager. She believed that if corporate only knew about the practice, they would want to do the right thing and rectify the situation.

Instead of rectifying the situation, nurses were frequently required to take 3, and sometimes 4, patients in the CVICU. Julie claims that untrained nurses were assigned ICU patients.

Julie trusted there would not be retaliation if she complained. There was. Julie claims her Director intimidated her and at one point frightened Julie by getting physically close. Julie's schedule was changed to working every weekend. She felt harassed.

Even the HR department at Westside acknowledged that the Director's actions were inappropriate. Even so, Julie was removed from duty within hours the day she refused to take a third patient.

On the day she was terminated, Julie had 2 patients. One patient had orders for transfer out to the floor. One of the patients was a post-op open heart surgery, and was on a diuretic. Julie knew that a patient on a diuretic often has to urinate urgently, and was concerned that she needed to respond right away to make sure he didn't fall.

Julie refused to accept the assignment of a 3rd patient. At 1700, The CVICU Director came to the unit and told Julie she had to take the 3rd patient. She again refused, was placed on investigative leave, and terminated 2 weeks later, in 2017. Julie had worked in HCA ICU since July 2016.

Julie later filed 2 Florida Whistle-Blower complaints in 2018, and has filed a suit against HCA for unlawful termination.

Julie's Director says that Julie was a disruptive staff member.

Julie says that the standard of care required by HCA called for continuous monitoring of her patients, and she was unwilling to violate that standard.

Right or Wrong?

Should Julie have gone with the status quo and quietly accepted a 3rd patient, knowing that at least 1 of her patients was lower acuity? Or did she do the right thing?

Is her reputation so damaged that she will have difficulty securing employment? Was she acting on principle or imminent patient endangerment?

Does she have any chance of prevailing against HCA?

Many of us have been in similar situations. What would you have done?

Nurse Beth,

Author, "Your Last Nursing Class: How to Land Your First Nursing Job"...and your next!

49 minutes ago, EllaBella1 said:

I understand where she was coming from, and I do understand the problem of not being able to monitor your third patient adequately. But one of her patients was a downgrade, so it really wasn't a true triple. This situation arises in my unit often. Typically what I will do is get a tele box from central monitoring for my PCU/tele downgrade patient so that they are monitored by someone else. Then I can devote most of my attention to my ICU patients. Of course I don't know if this was an option for her.

Until we have mandatory staffing ratios this issue will happen. I personally would not have chosen that moment to fight that battle.

They didn’t have the monitoring ability for her to take a 3rd. If the patient who should have been downgraded would have been downgraded a monitor tech would have been watching the patient. There were no monitor techs in the ICU.

julie is very courageous to finally say she wasn’t going to allow people to continue to be at risk and her sit by idle and quiet. It wasn’t in one moment she chose to fight a battle it was after months and months possibly years of these situations and leadership not caring!

Proud of you julie

3 hours ago, caliotter3 said:

I have yet to read anything positive about HCA. Were I in the acute care realm, I would never go to that entity for employment. Unfortunately, my life experience tells me that HCA is most likely not the only hospital with such unsafe policies.

Amen!

Specializes in ACNP-BC, Adult Critical Care, Cardiology.
4 minutes ago, Dsmcrn said:

Juan, Details can’t all be in an article due to brevity! Julie has months and months of emails she covered her behind with regarding going up the chain of command and they did nothing! I’m proud of her for speaking up!

But she's also the one without a job. Nurses can not single-handedly fight a battle such as this one. There are other nurses employed there. Did they object to their assignments as well and fill out a form when faced with the same situation? If not, her cause would not get as much attention and she is just a casualty of an unfair staffing practice of a hospital. Look, I support her and her decision but until nurses band together like we did as strong unions in California, nothing will happen.

2 minutes ago, juan de la cruz said:

But she's also the one without a job. Nurses can not single-handedly fight a battle such as this one. There are other nurses employed there. Did they object to their assignments as well and fill out a form when faced with the same situation? If not, her cause would not get as much attention and she is just a casualty of an unfair staffing practice of a hospital. Look, I support her and her decision but until nurses band together like we did as strong unions in California, nothing will happen.

Julie is not without a job

she gained employment right away and has remained employed to this day

Specializes in ACNP-BC, Adult Critical Care, Cardiology.
2 minutes ago, Dsmcrn said:

Julie is not without a job

she gained employment right away and has remained employed to this day

Fair enough, but that didn't stop that hospital from finding her replacement. Did that change anything?

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

I'm firmly with Julie on this one. This is absolutely the hill I would die on. Does she need funds for legal fees?

Specializes in Critical Care.

So 1 patient was a floor patient and the other was a post-op patient that was continent and could request to go the bathroom. Neither of those patients are ICU patients. She refused a 3rd? Why? Her assignment is a floor patient with transfer orders, a step-down patient and a potentially true ICU patient.

36 minutes ago, NotANewRN said:

So 1 patient was a floor patient and the other was a post-op patient that was continent and could request to go the bathroom. Neither of those patients are ICU patients. She refused a 3rd? Why? Her assignment is a floor patient with transfer orders, a step-down patient and a potentially true ICU patient.

I read in the OP that the post-op patient was post-op open heart surgery. Why do you think that a new post-op open heart surgery patient shouldn't be in the ICU? Even if the patient had been in the ICU for a while, there could be a number of other reasons why they were in the ICU after the surgery, such as complications from the surgery or co-morbidities resulting in complications post-operatively that required an ICU level of care.

Specializes in ER OR LTC Code Blue Trauma Dog.

HCA earned nearly 47 "B"illion in 2018.

Yet is unable to provide continuous monitoring or sufficient staffing levels.

Specializes in Critical Care.
31 minutes ago, Susie2310 said:

I read in the OP that the post-op patient was post-op open heart surgery. Why do you think that a new post-op open heart surgery patient shouldn't be in the ICU? Even if the patient had been in the ICU for a while, there could be a number of other reasons why they were in the ICU after the surgery, such as complications from the surgery or co-morbidities resulting in complications post-operatively that required an ICU level of care.

Maybe I have only worked in high acuity ICUs over the last 20 years because it has been so few times that I have had a patient be able to call to go to a bathroom. She made it seem like the Heart was on an oral diuretic, was coherent & continent enough to call for the bathroom. That sounds a whole lot like a step-down patient in my world. A "new" open heart ICU patient would not be able to do those things.