Tennessee nursing board pulls license of former Vanderbilt nurse over fatal drug error

The Tennessee Board of Nursing stripped a former nurse at Nashville-based Vanderbilt University Medical Center of her license during a July 23 disciplinary hearing linked to her administering a fatal dose of medicine to a 75-year-old patient in 2017, the Tennesean reports. 

Advertisement

The nurse, Radonda Leanne Vaught, was indicted on charges of reckless homicide and impaired adult abuse in 2019 and has a criminal trial set for next year. 

Four details: 

1. Ms. Vaught, who has pleaded guilty on all charges, is accused of accidentally injecting the 75-year-old patient in 2017 with vecuronium, a powerful paralyzer intended to keep patients still during surgery. The patient was supposed to receive a routine sedative. Vanderbilt fired Ms. Vaught in January 2018. 

2. The patient suffered cardiac arrest and died a day after being taken off a breathing machine. 

3. During the July 23 medical disciplinary meeting, the nurse said Vanderbilt encouraged nurses to override safeguards on medication cabinets due to a computer program, which she says contributed to the error. “Overriding was something we did as part of our practice every day,” Ms. Vaught said. “You couldn’t get a bag of fluids for a patient without using an override function.” 

4. Vanderbilt declined to comment on the allegations made by Ms. Vaught and her attorney, according to the Tennessean

Advertisement

Next Up in Nursing

Advertisement

Comments are closed.