NASHVILLE, Tenn. — RaDonda Vaught, a former nurse at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, will serve three years of probation for criminally negligent homicide and felony abuse stemming from a medication error that killed a patient in 2017.
The rare criminal prosecution of a healthcare worker has garnered nationwide attention. Nursing advocates say the conviction will result in fewer clinicians coming forward when they make mistakes, for fear of criminal punishment.
Vaught faced up to eight years in prison after a Tennessee jury convicted her of the two felony charges in March. Davidson County District Attorney Glenn Funk (D) charged Vaught with reckless homicide in February 2019, but the jury found her guilty of lesser charges. Tennessee also revoked her nursing license after initially taking no action against her.
On Friday, Davidson County Judge Jennifer Smith issued a three-year prison sentence, but granted Vaught supervised probation, which allows the former healthcare worker to avoid incarceration.
"This offense occurred in a medical setting. It was not motivated by any intent to violate the law," Smith said. "She has no criminal record. She's been removed from the healthcare setting. She will never practice nursing again. The situation will never be repeated."
Under state law, the conviction will be dismissed if Vaught abides by the terms of her probation, defense attorney Peter Strianse of Tune, Entrekin & White said after the sentencing hearing.
Vaught apologized to the family of Charlene Murphey, the 75-year-old patient who died when Vaught administered the wrong drug. "She may no longer be here, but she is very much alive in my mind. Every day, she reminds me of the consequences of my actions," Vaught testified before Smith announced the sentence.
Before Smith delivered her decision, witnesses representing the victim testified in favor of mercy. "Knowing the way my mom was, she wouldn't want any jail time. My mom was a very forgiving person," said Michael Murphey, Charlene's son.
Davidson County prosecutor Chad Jackson described the sentence as "fair" following the hearing. "We are happy that we were able to bring some closure to the Murphey family regarding the death of Charlene Murphey, and we are happy with the sentence the judge handed down," he said.
Charlene Murphey was admitted to Vanderbilt University Medical Center's neurological intensive care unit with brain bleeding. Before a PET scan, she was prescribed a sedative for nerves.
While retrieving the medication, Vaught overrode an automated dispensing cabinet without an order from a physician or verification from a pharmacist and mistakenly selected vecuronium, a neuromuscular drug that temporarily paralyzes the patient and requires a ventilator to support the lungs.
Vaught administered the vecuronium without recording it into Murphey's patient record and left, according to a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services investigation. Murphey was found unresponsive without a pulse approximately 30 minutes later. She later suffered a cardiac arrest that left her brain dead. Murphey was removed from a ventilator the next day and died 10 minutes later.
Prosecutors argued Vaught disregarded a system of safeguards put in place to keep patients safe from medical errors and abdicated standards of care by not monitoring Murphey after administering the medicine.
Vaught admitted her errors and reported the mistake as soon as she realized it had occurred, CMS found. At trial, Vaught's defense attorneys argued her actions didn't warrant a homicide conviction and that the hospital bears partial responsibility.
A law enforcement officer disagreed in testimony delivered at the sentencing hearing. "She felt by telling the truth that it will go away and that she should be rewarded for being honest. Honesty is an amazing thing, but it doesn't take away accountability. I don't think that she feels she should be accountable. She feels someone else should be held accountable," Tennessee Bureau of Investigations Special Agent Ramona Smith said.
CMS uncovered major deficiencies in Vanderbilt University Medical Center's response to the event. The Nashville-based hospital failed to report circumstances surrounding Murphey's death to the Tennessee Department of Health and the Davidson County medical examiner. The fatality was originally declared as resulting from natural causes.
CMS threatened to suspend reimbursement and made Vanderbilt develop a corrective plan of action and undergo a probationary period. The response included adding several new safeguards to the medical dispensing cabinets and removing vecuronium from them entirely. The medical center also settled out-of-court with Murphey's family for an undisclosed amount. The hospital did not face criminal charges.
Healthcare workers and patient safety groups rallied around Vaught during the trial, expressing concern that criminalizing mistakes will lead to cover-ups and inhibit progress designing systems that are resistant to human error. Many also fear the decision to prosecute will cause clinicians to leave the workforce entirely.
"We are grateful to the judge for demonstrating leniency in the sentencing of nurse Vaught," the American Nurses Assocation and the Tennessee Nurses Association said in a joint news release. "Unfortunately, medical errors can and do happen, even among skilled, well-meaning, and vigilant nurses and healthcare professionals."
The American Hospital Association is "pleased" that Smith showed Vaught leniency, said Robyn Begley, the AHA's chief nursing officer and the CEO of the American Organization for Nursing Leadership.
"Tragic incidents that result from medical errors should not be criminalized," Begley, a doctor of nursing practice and registered nurse, said in a statement. "Criminal prosecutions will discourage health caregivers from coming forward with their mistakes and will complicate efforts to retain and recruit more people into nursing and other health care professions that are already understaffed."
After the conviction, Funk's office released a statement attempting to walk back fears of broader criminal prosecution of medical errors by clinicians.
"The jury's conviction of RaDonda Vaught was not an indictment against the nursing profession or the medical community," the statement said. "This case was, and always has been about the gross neglect by RaDonda Vaught that caused the death of Charlene Murphey. This was not a 'singular' or 'momentary' mistake."