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    Nurse ‘knee-deep’ in opiate addiction stole fentanyl from vulnerable patient, feds say

    By Paloma Chavez,

    20 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3pqSf6_0vzB1p2F00

    A New Hampshire nurse is facing prison time after she pleaded guilty to stealing fentanyl from an ICU patient’s IV bag and replacing it with saline, federal officials said.

    In 2022, Lisa Richardson, 48, a nurse at Concord Hospital, waited for her coworker to go on lunch before entering an ICU patient’s room, according to a plea agreement filed Sept. 30 in U.S. District Court.

    She shut the blinds and switched some of the fentanyl in the patient’s intravenous bag for saline, the document said.

    In a second incident, Richardson entered the patient’s room when the assigned nurse went to the bathroom and was seen using a syringe to take fentanyl from an IV bag, documents said. Richardson was confronted by hospital administrators and told them “nothing happened,” the court documents said.

    In a later interview with administrators, she said she’d been using drugs for a year, the plea agreement said.

    Richardson was interviewed by officers and admitted to “obviously” having an “opiate use disorder and that at the time she was knee deep in (her) addiction,” the plea agreement said.

    She admitted to stealing fentanyl from ICU patient IV bags on four separate occasions, the document said.

    Although Richardson said she knew diluting the fentanyl could have an effect on the patient’s pain level, she said, “well I’ve been a nurse for a long time ... the dilution of 10 cc’s is minimal and that’s how I rationalized it in my crazy head,” the document said.

    Richardson, who had worked at the hospital for 23 years, with 18 years in the ICU, pleaded guilty to tampering with consumer products, according to an Oct. 7 news release by the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    Richardson’s attorney declined to comment when McClatchy News reached out on Oct. 8.

    McClatchy News also reached out to Concord Hospital on Oct. 8 for a comment and was awaiting a response.

    The charge carries a sentencing of no greater than 10 years in prison, up to three years of supervised release, and a fine of up to $250,000, prosecutors said.

    The Northfield woman is scheduled to reappear in court for her sentencing on Jan. 16, officials said.

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    Comments / 35
    Add a Comment
    ShayBelle
    6m ago
    So many addicts in nursing just make it harder for the people who don’t use. Now we gotta count recount count again.. drug screen and count some more with cameras everywhere.
    SharonC
    15m ago
    This happened years ago with a temp nurse hired to fill in on low staff days from a pool. I also worked surgical ICU. The problem for this nurse is that she wasn’t taking drugs from IVs. That’s easy. But we have a buddy system for all narcotics removed from the locked fridge and cupboard. It is out on the open at the nurses station and one nurse is witness to the other. I witnessed once and there were several others asked to witness. We only have 1-2 patients. She was removing a lot of drug and changing times. She would go down the hall to the bathroom and come back high. We called administration and they called security and had her removed. The poor patient had just had open heart surgery. Luckily he was still on the ventilator so we could medicate him without worrying about breathing.
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