<code id='C0395A44CF'></code><style id='C0395A44CF'></style>
    • <acronym id='C0395A44CF'></acronym>
      <center id='C0395A44CF'><center id='C0395A44CF'><tfoot id='C0395A44CF'></tfoot></center><abbr id='C0395A44CF'><dir id='C0395A44CF'><tfoot id='C0395A44CF'></tfoot><noframes id='C0395A44CF'>

    • <optgroup id='C0395A44CF'><strike id='C0395A44CF'><sup id='C0395A44CF'></sup></strike><code id='C0395A44CF'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='C0395A44CF'><label id='C0395A44CF'><select id='C0395A44CF'><dt id='C0395A44CF'><span id='C0395A44CF'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='C0395A44CF'></u>
          <i id='C0395A44CF'><strike id='C0395A44CF'><tt id='C0395A44CF'><pre id='C0395A44CF'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          Wikipedia

          Wikipedia

          author:focus    Page View:4215
          nurse RaDonda Vaught
          RaDonda Vaught sits in a courtroom ahead of her sentencing in Nashville, Tenn., on Friday, May 13, 2022. Nicole Hester/The Tennessean via AP, Pool

          Speaking before a virtual audience of CommonSpirit Health employees, RaDonda Vaught, the former nurse who accidentally killed a patient by administering the wrong medication, listed the outside factors she claims contributed to her fatal error. Among them: a missing drug order, a faulty medication dispenser, and a hurricane that hampered the drug supply.

          A Tennessee judge convicted Vaught of two felonies in 2022, and the controversial case became a rallying cry for nurses who warned it would discourage clinicians from admitting mistakes. Her closely watched trial centered on both the human errors and the shortcomings at Vanderbilt University Medical Center that may have contributed to the 75-year-old patient’s death in 2017. But in her Zoom presentation on Tuesday, Vaught spent more time emphasizing the latter.

          advertisement

          During her talk, Vaught acknowledged having made the critical error of pulling the wrong drug for the patient, Charlene Murphey. But even after selecting the paralyzing agent vecuronium instead Versed, the sedative the patient had been prescribed, Vaught admitted she had other chances to check her work, such as looking more closely at the vial.

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          explore

          DIEP, the 'gold standard' of breast reconstruction, is under threat
          DIEP, the 'gold standard' of breast reconstruction, is under threat

          AdobeIn1983,Iflewhomefromcollegetobewithmymotherasshewokeupfromamastectomy.Sheoptedoutofbreastrecons

          read more
          Being 'nonadherent' patient made me a more empathetic doctor
          Being 'nonadherent' patient made me a more empathetic doctor

          AdobeWhenIwas13yearsold,Ihadtotake11pillseveryday.Ihadnon-Hodgkin’slymphoma,andthesepillsworkedeithe

          read more
          Duchenne breakthrough therapy leaves behind pioneering families
          Duchenne breakthrough therapy leaves behind pioneering families

          DuchennemusculardystrophyDr.EdwinP.Ewing,Jr./CDCPatFurlongwassittinginherhomeofficeinMiddletown,Ohio

          read more

          AI can decode, harness the power of the humane immune system

          AdobeIftheCovid-19pandemichasshownusonething,itishowlittlewereallyknowabouthowthehumanimmunesystemwo