Francis v. Delaware Board of Nursing

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 23, 2018
DocketN16A-10-006 FWW
StatusPublished

This text of Francis v. Delaware Board of Nursing (Francis v. Delaware Board of Nursing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Francis v. Delaware Board of Nursing, (Del. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

CHRISTINE MULRY FRANCIS,

Appellant, v.

DELAWARE BOARD OF NURSING,

Appellee.

) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) )

C.A. No. N16A-10-006 FWW

ANGELA L. CALDWELL DEBENEDICTIS,

Appellant,

Vl

\./\./`./\./\/\./\./Vv\./V

Submitted: October 19, 2017 Decided: January 23, 2018

Upon Appeal from the Delaware Board of Nursing:

REVERSED.

OPINION AND ORDER

Daniel A. Grifflth, Esquire, 405 N. King St., Suite 500, Wilmington, Delaware

19801; Attorney for Appellant.

Carla A.K. Jarosz, Esquire, Deputy Attorney General, 820 N. French Street, Wilmington, Delaware 19801; Attorney for Appellee.

WHARTON, J.

I. INTRODUCTION

Christine Francis and Angela DeBenedictis (“Appellants” or “nurses”) filed their Notice of` Appeal on October 21, 2016, requesting judicial review of the October 7, 2016 order by the Delaware Board of Nursing (“Board”). Ms. Francis and Ms. DeBenedictis contend that the Board’s disciplinary Order Was in error.

ln considering this appeal, the Court must determine Whether the Board’s decision to discipline Ms. Francis and Ms. DeBenedictis is supported by substantial evidence and f`ree of` legal error. Upon consideration of the pleadings before the Court and the record beloW, the Court finds that there is insubstantial evidence to support the Board’s ruling, and therefore, the Board erred in reaching its decision. Accordingly, the Board’s decision is REVERSED.

II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL CONTEXT

Ms. Francis and Ms. Debenedictis are Registered Nurse licensees of the Delaware Board of Nursing (the “Board”).l On March l7, 2015 Ms. Francis and Ms. Debenedictis returned Sovaldi pills to a pill container to be administered after they had been spilled and discarded into a sharps container.2 Because they returned the discarded pills, a Hearing Of`ficer found Ms. Francis and Ms. Debenedictis in

violation of various DelaWare Board of Nursing Board Regulations (“the Board

l See Recommendation of Chief Hearing Of`f`icer at l. 2 Id.

Regulations”).3 Ms. Francis and Ms. DeBenedictis filed combined written exceptions to the Hearing Officer’s Recommendation, but the Board affirmed the Recommendation in full.4 Ms. Francis and Ms. DeBenedictis now appeal that finding.

The State of Delaware has a constitutional obligation to provide adequate healthcare for its inmate population.5 The State may discharge this obligation either by employing its own medical providers at the correctional facilities or by contracting with private companies whose employees work at the correctional facilities ln March 2015, the Department of Corrections (“DOC”) had a contract with Connections Community Support Programs, Inc. (“Connections”) for the provision of general, non-specialized treatment of DOC patients.6 DOC also had a separate contract with CorrectRX Pharmacy Services, Inc. (“CorrectRX”) to run the pharmaceutical services at the Delaware correctional facilities.7

Dr. Jamie McGee was the clinical pharmacist assigned by CorrectRX to work on-site at the James T. Vaughn Correctional Center (“JTVCC”).8 Dr. McGee’s

direct supervisor at CorrectRX was Dr. Valerie Barnes.9 Connections employed the

3 Id. at 30-34.

4 See Final Board Order at 1-3.

5 Appellants’ Opening Br., D.I. l6, at 7. 6 Id.

7 Id.

8 Id.

9 Id.

other pertinent actors: administering nurses Megan Bowerson and Roxanna Gonzalez; Nursing Supervisor and Health Services Administrator at JTVCC Christine Francis; Director of Nursing Angela DeBenedictis; and statewide medical director for Connections Dr. Laurie Ann Spraga.1O

Patient DL is an inmate at JTVCC.11 He has Hepacitis C and is prescribed Sovaldi as treatment.12 Each Sovaldi tablet costs approximately $1,000.00 and a full bottle contains 28 tabs.13 Due to its high costs, Connections strictly monitored the drug by counting it at every shift change and maintaining a log of its usage.14

On March 17, 2015 Nurse Gonzalez completed her shift at JTVCC and was to be replaced by Nurse Bowerson. As required, the nurses counted the Sovaldi tablets and, in the course thereof, Nurse Bowerson spilled twelve tablets onto the floor.15 Ms. Bowerson “wasted” the pills into the “sharps” container_a box intended for “biohazard” materials-and noted on a Controlled Substance Usage Log that the pills had been discarded.16 Because this caused the pill count to be 12 fewer than previous and the prescribed course of treatment required the patient to ingest the 12

pills over 12 days, the pills needed to be replaced quickly.

101d.at8,11,15.

11 State’s Ex. 1 at 94.

12 Id.

13 See Recommendation of Chief Hearing Officer at 8. 14 See Hr’g. Tr. l at 14. See also State’S Ex. 1 at 67-68. 15 Recommendation of Chief Hearing Officer at 3,5.

16 Ia’. at 5.

Nurse Bowerson contacted the on-site CorrectRX Pharmacist, Dr. McGee, to request a refill of the Sovaldi pills.17 Dr. McGee, in turn, contacted her boss, Dr. Barnes, who contacted Dr. Spraga.18 Dr. Barnes informed Dr. Spraga that 12 Sovaldi pills had been wasted and “asked Dr. Spraga to arrange for the retrieval of the pills.”19 Dr. Spraga then contacted Ms. Francis and told her to retrieve the Sovaldi pills from the sharps container.20 Upon Dr. Spraga’s directive, Ms. Francis and Ms. DeBenedictis proceeded to the pharmacy, located the sharps container, turned it over, and shook it until the 12 pills finally fell out.21 Included in the waste that fell from the container were retractable insulin syringes, retractable lancets, and diabetic test strips.22 There was additional material in the sharps container, but no one knows what exactly it was.23

The retrieved Sovaldi pills were taken to Nurse Francis’ office and inspected by Nurses Francis and DeBenedictis.24 Dr. McGee, upon the request from Dr. Barnes, came to Nurse Francis’ office to inspect the Sovaldi pills herself.25 Dr.

McGee has previously conducted inspections of pills approximately 20-25 times in

17 Id. at 8.

18 Id.

19 Id. at 13, 16. 20 Id. at 2(), 24. 21 Id.

22 Id.

23 Id. at 21.

24 Id. at 24.

25 Id.

the past to determine if they had been tampered with, altered, split or had previously been “cheeked” in a human mouth.26

Knowing that the pills had been wasted, Dr. McGee performed a visual inspection and determined that the tablets did not show any “visible signs of contamination in the form of blood, dirt, water, or other damage.”27 Furthermore, the pills looked new, “as if they had just come out of the bottle.”28 Dr. McGee and Dr. Barnes then decided that the pills would be returned to the bottle for

administration Dr. Spraga acquiesced to the two pharmacists decision as they

were the “subj ect matter experts.”30 Dr. McGee and Ms. Francis_with full knowledge of the pills adventure_ personally returned the tablets to their original bottle and updated inmate DL’s Sovaldi usage log.31 Inmate DL ultimately ingested the “wasted” Sovaldi pills and was told of the incident several days afterward 32 He has suffered no ill effects. On March, 26, 2015 Nurse Bowerson lodged a complaint with the Department

of State’s Division of Professional Regulation (“DPR”) against nurses Francis and

DeBenedictis. The State filed claims against the pharmacists, Dr. Spraga, and nurses

26 Hr’g. Tr. 1 at 88.

27 State’s Ex. l at 138.

28 Recommendation of Chief Hearing Officer at 24. 29 Id. at 29.

30 Hr’g. Tr. 1 at 264.

31 Hr’g. Tr. 2 at 117-119. See also State’s Ex. 1 at 67. 32 Hr’g. Tr. 1 at 57-582 131-132.

Francis and DeBenedictis. Dr. McGee and Dr.

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Francis v. Delaware Board of Nursing, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/francis-v-delaware-board-of-nursing-delsuperct-2018.