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VA Medical Staff Stole Morphine From Dying Patients

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  • VA Medical Staff Stole Morphine From Dying Patients



    Vials of morphine were systemically stolen from a Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center and replaced with water and saline so that dying veterans got the wrong treatments, a longtime VA nurse told The Daily Caller.

    “A nurse taking care of hospice patients over the past year had been diverting vials of morphine,” said Valerie Riviello, a 28-year veteran nurse at the Albany Stratton VA Medical Center in Albany, New York. “Those patients that were dying in hospice were not getting their intended pain medication.”

    Management became aware of the recurring theft without reporting it to higher levels of governance within the VA system, said Riviello, a Florence Nightingale Award winner for nursing.

    The nurse detailed visible abuse of a machine that dispenses medication. Hospital staff need to punch in a code to get medicine from the machine. Vials of morphine were being replaced with other ingredients, including saline and water. Records continued to show the accurate number of withdrawals from the machine, but morphine was not getting to the patients. The abuse was not noticed by management for about a year, according to Riviello.

    Albany Stratton VA Medical Center did not return a request for comment for this report.

    Albany is not the only VA medical center that allegedly struggles with medicine theft. Insiders told TheDC that Oklahoma City’s inner city drug trade oozes with stolen goods from the Oklahoma City VA Medical Center.

    Riviello said that she was later punished in one of the numerous cases of VA whistleblower reprisal that occurred across the United States in recent years. Riviello angered her superiors by removing a military sexual assault victim from bed restraints in November 2013.

    “We wanted to get her out of the restraints. It became apparent that she was in pain. She needed to go to the bathroom and be bathed. The nursing team took her out and gave her the care she deserved. She was cooperative. The first time we got her out after seven hours,” Riviello said. Doctors “stonewalled” her release from restraint.

    Though Riviello’s action was within the hospital’s own policy for nurses, and though her superior told her that she did the right thing, Riviello said that she was “almost immediately” punished.

    “They basically removed me from my position as nurse manager and gave me a special project to work on for eight hours at a time,” Riviello said. “They prevented me from having any patient contact.”

    Riviello was later issued a formal reprimand for removing the patient from restraint and threatened with criminal or civil action by lawyers representing the VA for using patient medical records to defend herself in disciplinary hearings under the Whistleblower Act and other statutes. The patient, meanwhile, was held in restraints for another 49-hour interval in February 2014.
    I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

  • #2
    There's a special place in hell for some of those people.

    That entire VA system is absolutely screwed....they need a serious house cleaning.

    .....and since when is physical restraint the humane treatment for a sexual assault victim??!
    70' Chevelle RagTop
    (Forever Under Construction)



    "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.”- Thomas A Edison

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    • #3
      This crap happens everywhere...not just the VA. For some reason, tons of nurses develop narcotics addictions. Why these addictions start, I wouldnt know but it happens all the time. We had a nurse at my work who killed herself a couple months ago after being accused of the same thing and refusing to take a drug test.

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      • #4
        You can't sue the VA for malpractice and there is no oversight. You can't go to another hospital and the staff isn't paid on how well they do their job, just how long they've been doing it.

        Welcome to the advanced stages of Obamacare.
        I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

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        • #5
          Originally posted by 8mpg View Post
          This crap happens everywhere...not just the VA. For some reason, tons of nurses develop narcotics addictions. Why these addictions start, I wouldnt know but it happens all the time.
          Most nurses I've met are crazy and love to party

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          • #6
            Originally posted by GrayStangGT View Post
            Most nurses I've met are crazy and love to party
            I actually know quite a few myself....my best friend was a Careflite nurse for over 15-years before he made a change. I've met a lot of people in that industry through him, and I'd say the vast majority have typically been a bunch of alcoholics and cheaters....always a party after work and seems someone is always screwing around on their spouse with someone else. From what I've seen....public servants in-general seem to fall into that life style....not all of course, but quite a number do.
            70' Chevelle RagTop
            (Forever Under Construction)



            "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.”- Thomas A Edison

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            • #7
              I've been to the careflite tailgate at the Tech games, and they know how to have a good time that is for sure.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by 8mpg View Post
                This crap happens everywhere...not just the VA. For some reason, tons of nurses develop narcotics addictions. Why these addictions start, I wouldnt know but it happens all the time. We had a nurse at my work who killed herself a couple months ago after being accused of the same thing and refusing to take a drug test.
                Originally posted by GrayStangGT View Post
                Most nurses I've met are crazy and love to party
                Originally posted by Rreemo View Post
                I actually know quite a few myself....my best friend was a Careflite nurse for over 15-years before he made a change. I've met a lot of people in that industry through him, and I'd say the vast majority have typically been a bunch of alcoholics and cheaters....always a party after work and seems someone is always screwing around on their spouse with someone else. From what I've seen....public servants in-general seem to fall into that life style....not all of course, but quite a number do.
                present company excluded, obviously.
                "If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford

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                • #9
                  Where is the morphine?

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by 93LXHORSE View Post
                    Where is the morphine?
                    Oh I see now. On the streets.

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                    • #11
                      I've only had morphine once, I went from feeling like I was on my death bed to being ready to get up and walk straight out of the ER. It was awesome.

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                      • #12
                        You have to be a sick son of a bitch to with hold pain meds from a dying person. I really hope the VA changes before I retire.
                        De Oppresso Liber.

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                        • #13
                          I have a very mixed bag of feeling about the va, I appreciate what it is supposed to stand for and on the other hand I know that they are fucked and a major reason why my father passed as early as he did.

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by inline 6 View Post
                            I have a very mixed bag of feeling about the va, I appreciate what it is supposed to stand for and on the other hand I know that they are fucked and a major reason why my father passed as early as he did.
                            Had a father-in-law I feel very similarly about. Personally, I'd rather see the VA disbanded/closed/retired and disabled veterans be given health insurance cards for private doctors/hospitals...etc.

                            I know some may think this is going to cost the tax payers dearly, but I really believe it would be cheaper compared to the VA.
                            Originally posted by MR EDD
                            U defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by ceyko View Post
                              Had a father-in-law I feel very similarly about. Personally, I'd rather see the VA disbanded/closed/retired and disabled veterans be given health insurance cards for private doctors/hospitals...etc.

                              I know some may think this is going to cost the tax payers dearly, but I really believe it would be cheaper compared to the VA.
                              Look what it already cost the tax payers.... It would be nice for the veterans to be able to choose their health care providers and not come out of pocket for going to who they want. I am sure if it cost any extra they could trim some of the fat off of some of the spending that could easily be considered gross negligence by anyone in the know. I wish I hadn't of clicked on this thread, I'm sure my blood pressure is up a bit.

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