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Thread: Filipino nurses face criminal charges

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    Default Filipino nurses face criminal charges

    Quote Originally Posted by Associated Press
    RIVERHEAD, N.Y. - For months, the nurses complained that they were subject to demeaning and unfair working conditions — not what they were promised when they came to America from the Philippines in search of a better life. So they abruptly quit.

    But in doing so, they put more than their careers at risk: Prosecutors hit them with criminal charges for allegedly jeopardizing the lives of terminally ill children they were in charge of watching.

    The 10 nurses and the attorney who advised them were charged with conspiracy and child endangerment in what defense lawyers say is an unprecedented use of criminal law in a labor dispute. If convicted of the misdemeanor offenses, they face up to a year in jail on each of 13 counts, and could lose their nursing licenses and be deported.

    The case has unfolded against the backdrop of a chronic nursing shortage in the United States. All of the defendants were from the Philippines, which exported 120,000 nurses last year.

    One defendant was a doctor back home and a top scorer on the country's medical board exams, but decided it was more lucrative to be a nurse in the United States. Others had respectable medical jobs back home and viewed their work in New York as a dream come true.

    "Coming to the United States is like the fulfillment of your nursing career," said Maria Theresa Ramos, who arrived on Long Island in 2004.

    The nurses are backed by several Filipino organizations in the U.S., as well as both the New York and California state nurses associations, which fear prosecuting nurses who quit their jobs could set a bad precedent.

    Prosecutors say the nurses' resignations — without notice — on April 7, 2006, jeopardized the lives of children at Avalon Gardens in Smithtown, where some of the patients are on ventilators and required constant monitoring.

    None of the patients suffered ill effects, but an indictment alleges the nurses knew their sudden resignations would make it difficult to find replacements. Their trial is scheduled to begin Jan. 28.

    The nurses claim that they were sent to work at facilities they never signed up for, and made to perform tasks they deemed demeaning and below their job descriptions. There were also disputes about scheduling and pay. Sixteen other nurses and one physical therapist also walked off the job at other facilities, but they were not charged because they did not care for terminally ill children.

    Lawyers for the 10 nurses say one of the nurses remained on-duty when resignation letters were submitted. They insist that the nurse — Ramos — stayed four hours past the scheduled end of her shift to ensure that the patients received proper care.

    The nurses contend they are facing prosecution because influential Democratic officials — Sen. Charles Schumer and Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas Spota — took interest in the case at the behest of an attorney for Sentosa Health Care, which operates Avalon Gardens.

    The defense has asked Gov. Eliot Spitzer to appoint a special prosecutor, a request being considered in Albany.

    "If I could get a special prosecutor, I have no doubt that this case would be dismissed in a heartbeat," said defense attorney James Druker, a former federal prosecutor who represents all 10 nurses. "I just want somebody fair and independent."

    Spota opposes a special prosecutor and insists he exerted no special influence on the case.

    "Their reason for asking for a special prosecutor is they say I have a close personal, political and financial relationship with the owners of Sentosa," Spota said. "Wrong. I don't have any relationship."

    The case also has attracted attention in Manila, where hearings in the Senate and House of Representatives were held last month.

    After the nurses complained they were being mistreated, a suspension order was issued against a Sentosa Health Care affiliate in the Philippines. But the suspension was later lifted, and the nurses believe that decision was politically motivated because Schumer got involved.

    He sent letters in June 2006 to the Philippines Overseas Employment Administration and the Philippines Labor Secretary, and later to Philippines President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, asking that they meet with Sentosa representatives and then "take any actions that you consider appropriate."

    The POEA head, Rosalinda Baldoz, said the dismissal of the nurses' complaint was not the result of political influence.

    Defense attorneys noted that Schumer's Long Island finance chairman, attorney Howard Fensterman, also represents Sentosa. Fensterman's office referred calls to a public relations representative, who derided the allegation.

    "This is on its face and in its substance a pathetic smokescreen to divert attention from the fact that 10 nurses got up and left pediatric patients on ventilators in a deliberate act of labor sabotage," said Gary Lewi, speaking on behalf of Fensterman and Sentosa.

    Schumer said the letters were the result of his efforts to ease the nationwide shortage of nurses and to seek due process on behalf of a New York company. He said they had "no connection whatsoever" to political donations made by Sentosa executives.

    "There are many times that a company will call us up and say a foreign country is treating it unfairly. I regard it as part of my job to help New York companies," he said.

    Defense attorneys say they are perplexed why the case is proceeding to trial because two separate state-agency investigations cleared the 10 nurses. Spota said the legal standards for a prosecution differ from those of the state agencies.

    He said the nurses and their attorney had the chance to tell their side at a grand jury proceeding — an unusual event in a misdemeanor case — but all declined to testify.

    Ramos and the other nurses have since found employment elsewhere. She works at Stony Brook University Hospital, also on Long Island, but still tears up with emotions at the prospect of being criminally prosecuted.

    "It's really devastating for us. ...How can it happen in America?" she said.
    Original story

    I don't know how it is in NY, but in most places a state agency will take action on a whole lot less evidence than a court requires. Even though this is a misdemeanor case, the statebelieves thay can convince a jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, that a wrongful act was comitted when the state health agency found that one was not. It looks to me like the facility is using political influence to remind these nurseds that they are here as slave labor. The scary part is that they may get away with it.
    ... so we went with the I/O line. Turns out he was responsive to painful stimuli after all...

    Give a man a match and he'll be warm for a second;
    Set him on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life

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    Ummm...they were terminal. TERMINAL!

    What's next? EMS administrators being sent to prison for firing EMS personnel because there is a lack of licensed EMS personnel? Hmmmmm....now THAT would be the shiznit!

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    My hospital sent two senior managers to Dubai where they employed 60 Filipino nurses. 1 year on 2/3 of them just didn't bother turning up for work one day.....they all skipped town once they'd got the relevant work permits etc never to be seen again........and what happened...diddly squatt!
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    Hrm. Dunno what to say. We had a lot of Filipino nurses in the SF Bay Area, and the quality certainly varied. One place had several of them that would take off in the middle of the night, leaving the SNF *empty* - and nothing ever happened that I know of.

  5. #5

    Default Re: Filipino nurses face criminal charges

    We encounter quite a few nurses from other countries where I work as well. Many of them have an extremely difficult time speaking/understanding english. I've always been puzzled at how they passed the RN licensure test. They do have to actually take that test don't they? Tell me we are not just importing people and accepting their credentials from whatever country they are from. Meanwhile, people trying to win a lottery to get into nursing school here have to do it the hard way.

    RN's vary so much it's sometimes hard to believe the range of their knowledge. I've met genius RN's and those who were completely ignorant.

    I'm sure we all have our stories of snf RN's...

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    Default Re: Filipino nurses face criminal charges

    Quote Originally Posted by chaos_cascade View Post
    We encounter quite a few nurses from other countries where I work as well. Many of them have an extremely difficult time speaking/understanding english. I've always been puzzled at how they passed the RN licensure test. They do have to actually take that test don't they? Tell me we are not just importing people and accepting their credentials from whatever country they are from. Meanwhile, people trying to win a lottery to get into nursing school here have to do it the hard way.
    I've wondered the exact same thing!

    And why can't we train our own nurses instead of importing them from outside the country?
    "Hell hath no fury as a medic woken at 3AM for BS." ~ Paramedic Proverb

    "How soon we forget history. Government is not reason, it is not eloquence, it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master. - George Washington"

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    Default Re: Filipino nurses face criminal charges

    Quote Originally Posted by StreetDoc67 View Post
    I've wondered the exact same thing!

    And why can't we train our own nurses instead of importing them from outside the country?
    I agree. I went round and round with a nurse at 3am at an ECF when I worked private. We would do free IV starts for contracted facilities when they couldn't get the line.

    "Are you here to give pain pill?"
    "I'm sorry?"
    "Are you here, to give pain pill?!"
    "...Uhm.. No. We're here to start an IV."
    "IV for who?"
    "I don't know. My partner is trying to find out."
    *She sees my partner walking towards us*
    "Are YOU here to give pain pill???"
    "UGHHH NO WE ARE NOT HERE TO GIVE PAIN PILL. WE ARE HERE TO START AN IV."


    Yeah I'm not exactly a sweet little nice girl when it comes to stupidity and lack of sleep... I get very grumpy, LOL. Ok so that may be an understatement.

    "Lady, people aren't chocolates. Do you know what they are mostly? Bastards. Bastard coated bastards with bastard filling."
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    PREVENT YOUR OWN LODD!!!!

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    Default Re: Filipino nurses face criminal charges

    Quote Originally Posted by Medic_QT View Post
    I agree. I went round and round with a nurse at 3am at an ECF when I worked private. We would do free IV starts for contracted facilities when they couldn't get the line.

    "Are you here to give pain pill?"
    "I'm sorry?"
    "Are you here, to give pain pill?!"
    "...Uhm.. No. We're here to start an IV."
    "IV for who?"
    "I don't know. My partner is trying to find out."
    *She sees my partner walking towards us*
    "Are YOU here to give pain pill???"
    "UGHHH NO WE ARE NOT HERE TO GIVE PAIN PILL. WE ARE HERE TO START AN IV."


    Yeah I'm not exactly a sweet little nice girl when it comes to stupidity and lack of sleep... I get very grumpy, LOL. Ok so that may be an understatement.
    Next time hold her down and start one on her. :)

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    Default Re: Filipino nurses face criminal charges

    The nursing shortage is a multifactorial problem. We have an aging nursing population of nurses, a small pool of qualified nursing instructors, and many new nurses leaving the field in the first several years of their career. It is no surprise companies look to other countries to hire nurses. (Not that I agree; however, I understand.)


    It is really easy to look at what some nurses do and make sweeping generalizations. However, as somebody already stated, you have great providers, knuckleheads, and everything in between. This is no different in the world of EMS. You have great providers and providers you look at while banging your head against the wall asking your self "how did they manage to pass NREMT?" The same concept applies to foreign nurses. Passing CGFNS and NCLEX does not ensure a competent provider well versed in English any more than passing NREMT would ensure a competent EMS provider.

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    Default Re: Filipino nurses face criminal charges

    Quote Originally Posted by luke_31 View Post
    Next time hold her down and start one on her. :)
    She may have flipped out and done a voodoo curse or shrank my head or something... Wow that was insensitive, even for me. I'll blame that on me having just taken 7 pills (one of which for pain) and not being entirely there right now hahahahaha.

    "Lady, people aren't chocolates. Do you know what they are mostly? Bastards. Bastard coated bastards with bastard filling."
    -Dr. Cox, "Scrubs"


    "Running is a big question mark that's there each and every day. It asks you, 'Are you going to be a wimp or are you going to be strong today?'" --Peter Maher
    PREVENT YOUR OWN LODD!!!!

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