Gov. Andrew Cuomo says his office is prepared to change who oversees nurse licensing
New York's inattention and slow response to incidents of patient harm make the state a haven for criminal and incompetent nurses, according to a report published byProPublica.
Despite a nationwide movement to improve nurse oversight and crack down on licensee misconduct, these reforms have largely passed New York by, according to the report.
The Office of Professions, which oversees nurse licensing in the state, does not require applicant nurses to undergo background checks or submit fingerprints, allowing those with criminal records to fly under the radar, ProPublica reported. The office, a division of the Department of Education, only reluctantly wades into criminal justice matters. When the board does act, the publication reported, it is often years after patients have been neglected, sexually assaulted and even killed.
On Thursday, Gov. Andrew Cuomo told WNYC that his office questions whether the Department of Education is "the right agency" to put in charge of nurse licensing, saying, "Should the state education department have the responsibility of licensing nurses, or is that too far afield for them and should the department of health do it?"
Related Articles:
CMS failed to report disciplined providers
Photos of dying patient posted to Facebook get four hospital workers fired
'Safe Patient Project' reveals medical horror stories
Hospital safety blog takes medical errors public
How hospitals' 'culture of secrecy' keeps error victims out of the loop
After report on nurse drug abuse, Virginia gov calls for background checks
CMS failed to report disciplined providers
Photos of dying patient posted to Facebook get four hospital workers fired
'Safe Patient Project' reveals medical horror stories
Hospital safety blog takes medical errors public
How hospitals' 'culture of secrecy' keeps error victims out of the loop
After report on nurse drug abuse, Virginia gov calls for background checks
Thank You Mr Ferguson and FH.
"Why, there outta be a law."
Governor Foghorn Bullsworth
No Governor, we have plenty of laws. What there ought to be is enforcement rather than the endemic protection of such malfeasors by peers and peer groups.
No comments:
Post a Comment