Bureau of Health Care Services v. Gerard Anthony Eichbauer Rn Crna

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 11, 2017
Docket332714
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bureau of Health Care Services v. Gerard Anthony Eichbauer Rn Crna (Bureau of Health Care Services v. Gerard Anthony Eichbauer Rn Crna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bureau of Health Care Services v. Gerard Anthony Eichbauer Rn Crna, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

BUREAU OF HEALTH CARE SERVICES, UNPUBLISHED May 11, 2017 Petitioner-Appellee,

v No. 332714 Board of Nursing Disciplinary Subcommittee GERARD ANTHONY EICHBAUER, R.N., LC No. 15-021443 C.R.N.A.,

Respondent-Appellant.

Before: GADOLA, P.J., and JANSEN and SAAD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Respondent, a registered nurse (R.N.) and certified registered nurse anesthetist (C.R.N.A.), appeals as of right a ruling by the Board of Nursing Disciplinary Subcommittee (DSC), concluding that respondent violated MCL 333.16221(a) and MCL 333.16221(b)(i) of the Public Health Code, MCL 333.1101 et seq., and placing him on probation until he completed three hours of continuing education and paid a $250 fine. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In October 2014, respondent returned to work as a nurse anesthetist at Henry Ford Health System (HFHS) following a period of medical leave for a knee surgery. Several of respondent’s colleagues noticed a change in his appearance and behavior and reported their concerns to hospital management. Cynthia Bendure, a managing nurse anesthetist at HFHS, conducted an audit of respondent’s narcotic withdrawal, administration, and wasting records from October to December 2014, and discovered approximately 30 discrepancies. Respondent was ordered to undergo a drug test, which tested positive for Vicodin and Valium. Although respondent had a valid prescription for Vicodin, he did not have a prescription for Valium. After receiving the results of the drug test, HFHS terminated respondent’s employment.

In February 2015, petitioner, the Bureau of Health Care Services, filed an administrative complaint against respondent, alleging that he violated MCL 333.16221(a) (authorizing discipline for a violation of general duty) and MCL 333.16221(c)(iv) (authorizing discipline for “possessing . . . a controlled substance . . . without lawful authority . . .”). Petitioner also issued an order summarily suspending respondent’s nursing license after finding that “the public health, safety, or welfare requires emergency action.” Respondent filed a petition to dissolve the -1- summary suspension, arguing that petitioner failed to offer any evidence or rationale for its position that respondent was a danger to public health.

At a hearing on respondent’s petition, Kim Copeland, a nurse anesthetist at HFHS, testified that on November 26, 2014, respondent reported to work with red eyes and he appeared shaky during the day. Stephanie White-Evans, another nurse anesthetist at HFHS, testified that on November 24, 2014, respondent failed to follow hospital protocol for disposing of a 60-cc syringe of remifentanil. White-Evans said respondent did not appear impaired, but she reported the incident because he failed to properly dispose of a controlled substance. Bendure also testified at the hearing. She explained that each nurse anesthetist is given a box of narcotics at the beginning of a shift and must record any drugs administered to patients on an electronic patient chart in a computer system called EPIC. Then, if there are any unused drugs following a procedure, the nurse anesthetist must waste the drugs and document the waste on a pharmacy sheet. Bendure said she did not know what happened to the drugs respondent failed to properly document, but she agreed that mistakes on a pharmacy sheet do not necessarily indicate that someone is diverting medication.

Following the hearing, the ALJ concluded that sufficient evidence was not produced to show that respondent was a danger to public health and thus dissolved the summary suspension. Petitioner then filed an amended complaint, dropping the allegation that respondent violated MCL 333.16221(c)(iv) for possessing a controlled substance without lawful authority and adding an allegation that respondent violated MCL 333.1622(b)(i) for “incompetence.”

At a hearing on the administrative complaint, nurse anesthetist Susan Trout testified that she records any drugs administered to a patient during a procedure on EPIC, then, at the end of the procedure, she reviews EPIC to tally up what drugs are remaining and wastes those drugs in the presence of another nurse who signs the pharmacy sheet after witnessing the waste. Trout said she had to call respondent on two occasions after he returned from medical leave because his electronic patient charts and pharmacy sheets “didn’t add up.” She testified that “nothing was missing,” but that respondent’s recording was “sloppy.”

Rita Haynes, a pharmacist at HFHS, testified that she reviews pharmacy sheets returned by nurse anesthetists to see what drugs were administered and wasted, and to ensure that the anesthetists tallied the numbers correctly. She explained that she only compares the numbers submitted on the pharmacy sheets with the EPIC charts “if the numbers don’t balance.” Haynes testified that respondent’s recording practices were “quite sloppy and needed to be corrected often,” but she never encountered a situation in which drugs were missing and never believed the errors were significant enough to report.

Claude Johnson, a nurse anesthetist manager at HFHS, was qualified as an expert regarding the standard of care. He explained that HFHS protocol requires nurse anesthetists to document any drugs administered on a patient’s electronic chart, then to document the wasting of any remaining drugs in the presence of a witness before marking it and obtaining the witness’s signature on a pharmacy sheet. Johnson testified that the standard of care applicable to nurse anesthetists required them to document the wasting of any controlled substances, and at HFHS, anesthetists documented that waste on pharmacy sheets.

-2- Respondent called Robert Shovan, a nurse anesthetist at HFHS, who testified that there are inherent complications associated with properly recording the amount of remifentanil administered through an infusion pump because the amount could be increased or decreased depending on a patient’s blood pressure or heart rate. He explained that, at the beginning of a procedure, nurse anesthetists calculate the amount that they think will be administered and input that calculation into EPIC. Then, he said, they must “guess how much [they]’ve pushed into the patient during the procedure that was in excess of that calculation or less than that calculation.”

Shovan testified that documenting waste was not part of the standard of care applicable to nurse anesthetists. When asked if he “believe[d] that errors on that sort of sheet constitute[d] incompetence,” Shovan responded, “No. If that’s the case, there would probably be 65, 75 percent within the community.” Shovan testified that it was his understanding that 20 out of 25 people in his department had “been warned about their issues with narcotics counts” after EPIC was introduced. When asked, however, whether “a nurse has a general duty to account for the narcotics that he is entrusted with during his shift,” Shovan answered, “Yes.”

In September 2015, the ALJ issued a proposal for decision, concluding that petitioner failed to establish that respondent violated MCL 333.16221(a) or MCL 333.16221(b)(i) because there were no “benchmarks offered to determine whether the discrepancies in Respondent’s charting constituted a failure to meet minimal standards of acceptable prevailing practice.” In March 2016, the DSC issued a decision disagreeing with the ALJ’s legal determinations. The DSC concluded that respondent’s “repeated failure to accurately document the wasting of controlled substances is a violation of general duty,” and the standard of care required “a nurse anesthetist to accurately document the administration and wasting of controlled substances.”

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

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