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RaDonda Vaught, a former nurse in Tennessee who was convicted on felony charges for fatally injecting a patient with an incorrect drug, was sentenced to probation Friday in a case that became a rallying cry for health-care workers fearful that medical mistakes would be criminalized.
On December 26, 2017, Vaught was caring for a 75-year-old patient at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in the Neuro Intensive Care Unit. According to reports, Vaught was the Help-all nurse and had an orientee working with her during the shift.
Gross neglect The jurys conviction of Radonda Vaught was not an indictment against the nursing profession or the medical community. This case was, and always has been about the gross neglect by Radonda Vaught that caused the death of Charlene Murphey, the district attorneys office said in the statement.
RaDonda Vaught, whose criminal prosecution for a fatal medical error made her case a flashpoint in national conversations about nursing shortages and patient safety, was sentenced on Friday to three years of probation in a Nashville criminal court.
An emergency room nurse for 14 years, she said she broke down crying when Vaught was found guilty. Never in my 14 years have I felt so helpless, she said.
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Vaught, 38, was convicted on March 25 of negligent homicide and impaired adult abuse over the medication error, which resulted in the death of 75-year-old Charlene Murphey at Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) in 2017.
A former Vanderbilt University Medical Center nurse is sentenced to three years of supervised probation. NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WTVF) RaDonda Vaught, a former Vanderbilt University Medical Center nurse, learned Friday she will not spend any time in prison after a deadly 2017 medical mistake.
When Vaught could not find Versed in an automatic drug dispensing cabinet, she used an override and accidentally grabbed vecuronium instead. An expert witness for the state argued that Vaught violated the standard of care expected of nurses.
RaDonda Vaught, a former nurse in Tennessee who was convicted on felony charges for fatally injecting a patient with an incorrect drug, was sentenced to probation Friday in a case that became a rallying cry for health-care workers fearful that medical mistakes would be criminalized.
There is no doubt that Vaught made a grave error when she gave her patient an injection of vecuronium, a muscle relaxant that left the 75-year-old woman unable to breathe, instead of Versed, a sedative.