BAY CITY, MI -- Two women have filed a lawsuit
against a Bay County hospice, alleging they were fired for refusing give
medication that could hasten a patient's death and for alerting police
to the matter.
Police say their investigation of the case is over after a medical
examiner found no inappropriate conduct in connection with the man's
death. No one has been charged with any wrongdoing.
The lawsuit of Tamara Gies and Jillian Brown was filed in Bay County
Circuit Court on Monday, Aug. 20. It names Brian's House Community Group
Inc. as the defendant and seeks damages exceeding $25,000.
Brian's House is located at 664 W. Nebobish Road in Hampton Township.
After being closed for five years, it reopened in June 2017 as a
"social home," as opposed to an inpatient hospice home, thanks to
fundraising and volunteer efforts.
Those prescribed hospice care by their doctors can choose their care
provider and opt to spend their final days at Brian's House, rather than
a nursing home or a residence.
Brown and Gies both worked at the facility as caregivers, having been
hired in September 2017 and February 2018, respectively, their lawsuit
states.
The suit states that on or about May 11, 2018, manager Christine
Quinn told Brown she had previously worked at Toni & Trish House, an
Auburn-based hospice facility.
On June 13, a coworker told Gies she had received a piece of paper from a
worker on another shift, which detailed a handwritten schedule for a
patient to receive morphine and Ativan, the lawsuit says. Gies also
overheard another coworker state the paper "was not a doctor's order,"
the suit alleges.
Gies contacted a registered nurse at McLaren Hospice and asked if the
note was a doctor's order. The nurse confirmed it was not and was not
acceptable, according to the suit.
The next day, Brown noted the patient's morphine dose had increased from 0.5 milliliter to 1 milliliter.
"Although Ms. Quinn wanted the increased dose administered right away
to the patient, the hospice nurse ... cautioned that giving the dose
might 'send the patient over the edge,' which is a euphemism for causing
the patient to die," the suit states.
Contacted by The Bay City Times-MLive, Quinn said Gies and Brown's allegations are false.
"As far as the medication, that was something the nurse and doctor instructed," Quinn said Tuesday.
The patient died June 16. The same day, Gies met with a Hampton
Township police officer to report she and Brown had been instructed by
Quinn to give a patient medication against a doctor's order to cause to
his death. Gies also spoke with then-President Dwight McCulloch to
notify him of the police report, to which McCulloch reacted negatively,
the suit states.
On June 20, Quinn notified Gies she had been taken off the work
schedule and an Employee Discipline Form had been put in her file. The
form resulted from Gies "not following chain of command when it came to
issues involving distribution of meds and going to law enforcement
without allowing Board to do own investigation," the suit states.
Brown's name was also removed from the work schedule on June 25.
Thereafter, McCulloch told Brown that Quinn wanted her fired for being
part of the police report, the lawsuit alleges.
Gies on June 26 received a letter authored by Quinn saying she was
being fired and referenced Gies "involving outside law enforcement," the
suit alleges.
Quinn on July 18 told Brown her services were no longer required as well, the suit states.
The lawsuit contains two counts -- retaliation in violation of
Whistleblower Protection Act and retaliation in violation of Michigan
Public Policy.
Hampton Township Police Lt. Michael Wedding said that while Gies had
filed a report, officers are no longer investigating as Bay County
Medical Examiner Dr. Howard Hurt ruled there was no inappropriate
conduct in the death of the patient.
A court date for the civil lawsuit is pending.
Full Article & Source:
Lawsuit claims hospice workers told to overmedicate patient at Brian's House
1 comment:
I hope this lawsuit is successful. Hospice is just another good thing gone bad.
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