RaDonda Vaught is seeking reinstatement of her Tennessee (TN) nursing license after a fatal medication error in 2017.
Updated:
TN state nursing board's 2021 decision to revoke her nursing license will be appealed in court on Tuesday, March 28. If the appeal is successful, she will face a retrial before the Tennessee Board of Nursing.
Nursing boards generally make decisions regarding the reinstatement of nursing licenses based on various factors, including the nature and severity of an offense, the rehabilitation efforts of the individual, and their ability to practice nursing safely and competently.
If RaDonda Vaught has completed the requirements (if any) and demonstrated that she could meet the standards of safe and competent nursing practice, then it may be possible for her to have her RN license reinstated. However, this decision ultimately rests with the state nursing board.
Most of us recall the RaDonda Vaught case in 2017 because it involved a fatal medication error, and she was charged with reckless homicide for the mistake. The decision to prosecute her made history because it set a precedent for criminalizing medical errors.
On December 26, 2017, RaDonda Vaught, a 35-year-old RN, worked as a "help-all" nurse at the Nashville, Tennessee-based Vanderbilt University Medical Center. She was sent to Radiology Services to administer VERSED (midazolam) to Charlene Murphey, a 75-year-old woman recovering from a brain injury and scheduled for a PET scan.
Charlene Murphey was experiencing anxiety, and her provider ordered Versed, a sedative, to help her through the procedure. RaDonda entered the letters "ve" for Versed (the brand name) in the automated dispensing cabinet (ADC) search field.
No matches populated the screen under the patient's profile, so RaDonda used the ADC override function and again entered "ve," this time mistakenly selecting vecuronium.
Vecuronium is a neuromuscular blocking agent, and patients must be mechanically ventilated when administered vecuronium. RaDonda reconstituted the drug and administered what she thought was one mg of Versed.
Unaware of her mistake, RaDonda left the patient unmonitored and went on to her next help-all assignment in the ED to conduct a swallow test.
Charlene Murphey was discovered about 30 minutes later by a transporter who noticed she wasn't breathing. She had sustained an unwitnessed respiratory arrest and was pulseless. She was coded, intubated, and taken back to ICU but was brain-dead and died within twelve hours.
Legal System
On February 4th, 2019, RaDonda was indicted and arrested on charges of reckless criminal homicide and impaired adult abuse.
On May 13, 2022, she was found guilty of criminally negligent homicide and gross neglect of an impaired adult, and sentenced to 3 years of supervised probation.
Board of Nursing
On September 27, 2019, the TN Department of Health (Nursing Board) reversed its previous decision not to pursue discipline against the nurse and charged RaDonda Vaught with:
On July 23, 2021, at the BON disciplinary trial, the Tennessee (TN) Board of Nursing revoked RaDonda Vaught's professional nursing license indefinitely, fined her $3,000, and stipulated that she pay up to $60,000 in prosecution costs.
Many opposed RaDonda Vaught being charged with a crime, including the American Association of Critical Care Nurses (AACN), the Institute of Safe Medicine Practice (ISMP), and the American Nurses Association (ANA).
If nurses fear reporting their errors for fear of criminal charges, it discourages ethical principles of honesty.
But should RaDonda be allowed to practice nursing again?
The (ISMP) felt strongly that revoking her license was a travesty and that the severity of the outcome wrongly influenced the decision. Contributing system errors were minimized, and RaDonda Vaught became the scapegoat, while Vanderbilt escaped full notoriety.
The ISMP said RaDonda displayed human error and at-risk behaviors but not reckless behavior. She did not act with evil intent and is a second victim of a fatal error. In a Just Culture, discipline is not meted out for human error.
Do you think RaDonda Vaught should be allowed to practice nursing again, and why or why not?
Thank you for your thoughts!
hello?
Wuzzie said:
Oh I know....I would have read the damn vial!
Hmmm, now that I've administered (what I think is) a fast acting benzodiazepine INTRAVENOUSLY, I'm gonna sit here for a while to see how the patient responds because if I ask myself 'what's the worst thing that could happen?' over-sedation and yikes even respiratory arrest are top o' the list
NurseGerard said:No - you're throwing up all kinds of rhetorical distractions and in your feelings
I am NOT RaDonda, the nursing colleagues I know and trust are NOT RaDonda and HUMANITY requires us to center Mrs Murphey first last and always
the discussion about license is over done fini kaput
she's getting paid $10,000 a pop to talk when she really needs to go somewhere be quiet and get support from folks who love her
Thank you for the response. No-No feelings at all, just real talk, and why does she have to be quiet, what, should she stay shaking in a corner forever, I can not speak on what she is getting paid to do because I am not following this woman like that, but thank you for the update.
LWitcher said:Thank you for the response, no need to curse, glad you make sure you read as we all should, as I stated before COLD.
I cursed because this makes me angry. It wasn't an error, it was omission after omission after omission (12 in total) in a blindingly egregious example of poor nursing care. The response from her and her flying monkies has been just gross and now she's benefitting from it?! 10k a pop to have her come speak?! Are you kidding me?
Wuzzie said:I cursed because this makes me angry. It wasn't an error, it was omission after omission after omission (12 in total) in a blindingly egregious example of poor nursing care. The response from her and her flying monkies has been just gross and now she's benefitting from it?! 10k a pop to have her come speak?! Are you kidding me?
Wow, is this woman suppose to just go die somewhere, I can respect the anger, but my goodness, we don't have to deal with that day replay in our minds over and over again, the family AND she does, is that not enough. Let that woman live her life as best as she knows how, this was a tragic incident no doubt, but I will speak for myself, I am not her JUDGE nor JURY.
LWitcher said:Wow, is this woman suppose to just go die somewhere,
Did I say that? Hyperbole is not beneficial in these types of discussions. I have a difficult time believing she is suffering all that much making 10k a shot to tell people how this was all the fault of a system that did her wrong. Did you hear about the "healing trip" to Costa Rica that people paid money to go on with her?
LWitcher said:Thank you for the response. No-No feelings at all, just real talk, and why does she have to be quiet, what, should she stay shaking in a corner forever, I can not speak on what she is getting paid to do because I am not following this woman like that, but thank you for the update.
Baloney. No "real talk" makes excuses for an unrepentant killer. He victim died a relatively slow and agonizing death of suffocation. She was fully aware and unable to communicate her need in any way while the nurse turned her back and walked away. She shouldn't be anywhere near any sort of healthcare decision making for others ever again.
You calling that "real talk" cold is irrelevant noise.
LWitcher said:Wow, is this woman suppose to just go die somewhere, I can respect the anger, but my goodness, we don't have to deal with that day replay in our minds over and over again, the family AND she does, is that not enough. Let that woman live her life as best as she knows how, this was a tragic incident no doubt, but I will speak for myself, I am not her JUDGE nor JURY.
No one ever said she should go away and die. Whatever she does, she should in no way represent nursing or get her license back. What a silly idea to even entertain that she should get her license back. On the continuum of small error to big error she's butted up to the line of deliberate.
NurseGerard
138 Posts
Hmmm, now that I've administered (what I think is) a fast acting benzodiazepine INTRAVENOUSLY, I'm gonna sit here for a while to see how the patient responds because if I ask myself 'what's the worst thing that could happen?' over-sedation and yikes even respiratory arrest are top o' the list