Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Nightingales And Needles

In the on-going execution debacle, it looks like nurses don't want to be left holding the needle.

According to the N&O, a handful of nurses are urging the N.C. Board of Nursing to pass an ethics policy forbidding its members from participating in executions.

Trouble is, the NC Nursing Practice Act would have to be modified for any ethical position taken by the NC Nursing Board to be binding in any real sense. For as the law stands now, even if the Board issued an edict against nurses participating in executions, a nurse could not be disciplined if he/she did.

That's different from the power that the Medical Practice Act grants the mighty NC Medical Board. All they have to do is issue a new "position statement" and a doctor is bound to comply or risk sanction.

Not that "position statements" ever meant a hill of beans in my case.

Welcome to my world, ladies and gentlemen of the nursing profession. If the politicians find a way to reopen the death chamber for business, unless you can petition those same politicians to change the law (good luck with that) . . . you will be left holding that needle.

It's called a dump.

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