This is "how" Nurses divert drugs for their own use.

Nurses General Nursing

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This is the "how" Nurses divert drugs for their own use.

The extent to which this goes on depends on availability. In the hospital setting, Nurses who are in advanced stages of addiction pick work settings where availability is certain, frequent, and a sure thing every shift they work. Oncology is the most desired setting for obvious reasons, but when needing narcotics, any setting where they are given is good enough.

The addicted Nurse receives his/her assignment, even "bartars" with his/her peers to "switch" patients so that she receives the ones who have orders for narcotics. She/he starts his/her shift by "reviewing" his/her patients med sheets to identify sources of obtaining addictive drugs. This Nurse looks in particular for poly-pharmaceutical orders so he/she can "bait and switch" at his/her own behest. The Nurse then "assesses" the condition of the patients and determines which ones are "confused", which ones are deeply sedated, which ones would be the least likely to know meds were being played with.

The Nurse then takes the narcotic, signs it out, and intends to use it for himself or herself. If the same patient has some other drug like Benadryl, Vistaril, Ativan, that is what is given in lieu of the narcotic. If a patient is on a Morphine or Demerol infusion the Nurse goes to the room, removes the 50cc syringe, having already emptied out a 30cc vial of 0.9normal saline for injection bottle, withdraws the drug, injects it into the empty saline bottle and replaces the 50cc syringe volume with the withdrawn 30cc of saline so the volume remains the same. The same technique is used with 50cc bags of narcotic infusions.

Nurses who are "stockpiling" narcotics for their own use come to work wearing a Lab coat, smock, or longsleeved, deep-pocketed smock. Morphine, Demerol, and Dilaudid carpujets are easily hidden in clothing, under the arch of the foot in the shoe, or in any body orifice that will accommodate them.

The Nurse often "forgets" to document the narcotics supposedly given, on the patient's med sheet in the chart. The Nurse who is an advanced stage of addiction diverts narcotics and uses them while on duty. They are injected in the thigh muscles on a trip to the bathroom at break times or anytime that's convenient. A bandaid or two over the injection site assures no blood leakage onto the pants uniform.

Pill forms of addictive drugs: Vicodin, Valium, Ativan, Xanax, Librium, Oxycontin, Oxycodone, MS Contin, are easily "palmed" and dropped into the pocket and taken later on that break to the bathroom.......or stockpiled, and hidden at home later.

Clothing with pockets also serves as a hiding place for needles, syringes, tourniquets, vials, carpujets, if needed at home or on the bathroom break. On a busy, shortstaffed, highly stressful unit, all of these things are easy to come by, and easily hidden.

In late stages of addictive disease the Nurse is NOT thinking about his/her illustrious career, the consequences that are inevitable, let alone how it will affect family, career, - or the patient and the people with whom they work. This Nurse needs that "high" and will go to any length to get it. The addicted Nurse is NOT necessarily the "most suspicious" looking one of all, but is more likely to be the most admired, most excellent Nurse on the Unit, and in fact is the least likely Nurse expected.

Addiction is no respector of person, position, race, color, creed.

There are few, if any, State Boards of Nursing that do not offer a diversion/rehabilitation program for such Nurses. However, if it is discovered that the Nurse is diverting for the purpose of sale and distribution solely, or along with personal use, that Nurse is NOT eligible for these programs according to the law.

Bonnie Creighton,RN, Minnesota

Yesterday I used the pixis for the first time as a student nurse. There was a prototype finger recognition peripheral added to the pixis. Learning about drugs is pretty interesting, opioids and steriods. I wonder what a morphine buzz would be like? We use it as a tool to stop pain. Wouldn't a PT know right away if no pain med was given? And, messing with your prostiglandins and your nervous.sys is not good.

If I saw someone shoot up in the wrist, like Dr. Carter did that time on ER, I would no know what I would do. Then again, you would have to drop a dime for your own protection.

What does it mean when RN witness the destruction of a drug? Forget it, thats easy :-) Pretty much I feel other RN's would know if something was "not right."

Thank you Bonnie for sharing your story :) It takes a lot of courage to discuss something as serious with this. I think it's WONDERFUL that you're educating and helping people. :)

And reminding people that it's a disease and there is treatment.

Anita

Originally posted by ERNurse752

...which brings up another interesting topic...

Should all hospitals institute mandatory random drug testing for all employees?

I

No way!! This is a blatant invasion of privacy. Employees should only be tested if there is legitimate reason to suspect that they are using.

I remember a time, many years ago, one of our nurses's fathers had died. She didn't take the usual 3 days leave but returned to work the next day. We were very worried about her not taking time for herself and her grief. We watched her closely. She went into the bathroom and was in there longer than we thought was safe.

We knocked. No answer. Security called and the door unlocked and she was found on the floor, unconscious and Morphine carbuject and Vistaril vial found on the floor and syringe wrapper in the trash.

We took her to ER where she was given narcan and regained consciousness and finally got the help she needed.

We found out that she had had a drug problem before and the stress of losing her father made her take the chance of using at work which she hadn't before.

I don't know what happened as she never returned to work at our facility. I do hope she got the help she needed for the pain in her life.

That case was sad but the worst for me was an ICU nurse who stole the drugs for her boyfriend. Her excuse, "He said no other man wants me and if I want to stay with him, I have to take care of him and his needs." Definitely a form of abuse but she still lost her license because she was providing the drug for another person.

Recently, our hospital was bought and everyone had to have a drug test. Several people were let go. Two were on my unit. One was marajuana and the other was percription pain medication. The latter had had two major surgeries very close together and it was the only way she could work and handle the pain she still had. Unfortunately, the new bosses considered them to be working impaired as they had no way of knowing if they had taken the medication while at work or not.

We weren't the only unit hit by the drug testing results causing staff to be let go.

This can bring up the debate of "What I do on my off time should not affect my job." But who's to say exactly when the person last used their drug of choice whether it be perscription, street or alcohol. I can see both sides of the situation with that... freedom comes in but so does patient safety.

All who have successfully made it through rehab and are back to working in the job they love... you have my admiration for your strength and congratulations.

Kat

All of the responses are insightful, heartfelt, and appreciated. Thanks to each of you for your own open-ness in sharing your experiences as well.

To "mamabear"......CONGRATULATIONS to you......LOVED the "avitars".....and am glad you too are unashamedly able to be open and honest about your own sobriety. There is always hope. There is always help. We share openly in this way because this is a very real, very fatal dis-ease if left untreated. It is a dis-ease that will first take everything in your life, then your very life, just like terminal cancer or any other untreated terminal illness.

And, "anitame".......thank-you for the kind words. Kind words are good "medicine", and I am grateful to be on the "good" end of life today!!

FYI in general.......I have received many private e-mails from people who I will keep anonymous. There are many many "hurting" Nurses still among the ranks.

Bonnie Creighton,RN in Minnesota

when our hospital unit was training to use the Pyxis machine the drawers were filled with candy for practice. I was horrified for two reasons. One for the behavior of nurses taking anything out of a drawer and putting it in their own mouth and also for the association of meds as innocent and sweet as candy.

Though I am not a drug user, (For the grace of God) or perhaps because of it, I sometimes worry when I give Narcs to a patient. Sometimes I give more than other nurses. I am very conscious of patient pain the need and right of the patient to have it relieved. The fact it is not my job to withhold relief from an (albite adicted)suffering patient. Also I am aware that those adicted actually require more of a narc for pain relief than the rest of us and they are entitled to relief.

So, I sometimes wonder if I will be suspected of dirverting drugs. It is such a fine line to tread.

What an excellent thread and so courageous and thoughtful of you to post. What gets me is that places where I have worked have had situations where the record keeping (between shift count, etc.) was so sloppy that anybody could have been diverting and easily. At some point in time an indiv begins to wonder. And then what happens to you, the indiv, when you put your foot down and insist on a correct count, and corrrect actions?

Your co-workers screw you over, b/c this is just another example of some of their job "sloppiness" and you are a b***h if you say a word. Thanks again for talking about something most of us are too scared to talk about under any circumstance. And congratulations on your success and sobriety. (BTW: It occurred to me that your thread and offer to communicate w/others is honoring one of the steps. Isn't there one about bringing the message to others? May God bless you.

Mario:

When one nurse witnesses the destruction of a drug, he/she watches and then documents that the drug was [a] squirted down the sink or put in the little bin in the top drawer of the Pyxis (the one with the Chapman lock).:) I'm sure there are ways to get around it, but I'm more concerned with staying clean and sober so I can do my job to the best of my ability:saint:

Specializes in Med-Surg, Trauma, Ortho, Neuro, Cardiac.

That's an awesome story. Thanks for sharing your sobriety with us.

Originally posted by Rustyhammer

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

We have all seen the abusing nurse go down in flames at least once. It's not a pretty picture is it?

We know the nurse who gives all the prn's on her shift and nobody ELSE seems to have that patient in pain.

We can see when the same nurses count is always a bit off "I dropped one and no one was around to see me waste it".

It's sad.

-Russell

nurses are human also.....

maybe when we give up on the notion of being supernurses.....

then we will get serious.....and just do our jobs to the best of

our abilities...........

now to treat each other.....and to have management, administrators and again, each other with the same respect.........

that we show to our patients............

gotta run and go have fun dispensing medication and patient care at work.........

am not being tongue-in-cheek :p about a very serious subject,

micro:p

I thought of something else concerning this general subject. What is really "sicko" and indicative of just how low some in our profession can stoop, is when one or more nurses "set up" a co-worker they don't like for a prob w/the controlled meds. They know that by doing this, it is a sure-fire way to get the outcast fired and probably out of the job pool for good. Yes, sad but true, it does happen.

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