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WASHINGTON, April 14, 2000 -- DoD anthrax experts are increasing their

efforts to get service members and their families " good, credible

information before they get disinformation " from other sources.

Army Col. Randy Randolph, director of the Anthrax Vaccine Immunization

Program Agency, said his organization is currently doing four things to

improve the vaccine education program.

The first and perhaps farthest-reaching step is a 23-minute video going

out to the services by late April or early May. " We decided we needed a

training product that could be sent out worldwide that all commanders

could use to inform service members and family members about the

anthrax program, " Randolph said.

He said the video includes information about the threat anthrax poses

to U.S. service members, the lethality of anthrax, and the vaccine's

safety, as well as addressing rumors circulating and damaging the

program's credibility.

" It introduces some experts in DoD and many others outside of DoD who

talk about these rumors and the credibility of the vaccine program, "

Randolph said. He said the video was designed with 18- to 25-year-olds

in mind and will be mandatory watching for all service members within

fiscal 2000.

The second, a toll-free information line, 1-877-GET-VACC, began in

summer 1999. Program experts man it Monday through Friday from 8 a.m.

to 6 p.m. Eastern time. Randolph said the agency could staff the line

on evenings, weekends and holidays if the demand warrants, but that

hasn't been necessary so far.

The third, a new Internet site at www.anthrax.osd.mil, is already up

and running as well. Randolph said the site is an improvement over

previous ones because it incorporates visitors' feedback and

suggestions. He said his team is constantly adding information that

people request on the Web site.

" If we hear about it when we're out on the road giving briefings, if

someone calls us on the toll-free information line, if someone sends us

an e-mail and says they're interested in a certain piece of

information, then we add that piece of information on the Internet, "

Randolph said. " If there are articles circulating, then we put those on

the Web site and comment about the information in those articles. "

Randolph called the Internet site " the most important thing we've done

to specifically address the misinformation on the Internet, " and he

said more changes are in store. Because information is added constantly

to the Web site, it's grown too large to navigate easily, Randolph

said. Yet another redesign, scheduled to be unveiled this summer, is

intended to make the site easier to use.

The agency's fourth step is to add a public e-mail address to contact

program officials. Individuals can e-mail comments, questions and

concerns to avip@.... The Web site has a direct e-mail

link for visitors.

Randolph was quick to emphasize these products are additional steps in

what has been an aggressive education process since the immunization

program began in 1998. Previous education products, still updated and

used, include educational pamphlets and a PowerPoint troop-education

briefing available to commanders on the Web site.

" We've tried to provide factual information to service members and

family members up front in the most direct way to inform them about the

program, " Randolph said. " We have made consistent, routine improvements

to all of those products and created new products to reach wider

audiences and better address their concerns. " And he's not done yet.

" We are going to continue a very aggressive education effort until

everyone understands what this program is about, " he said. " There is a

very real threat. This disease, if contracted in an unprotected

population, is very lethal. We've got a vaccine that's as safe and

effective as other vaccines that we routinely take and that we give our

kids every day here in the United States. "

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Anthrax Vaccine Supplier Sought

By DAVID BRISCOE

..c The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - A shortage of anthrax vaccine and huge increases in the

cost of buying it from a single private source are spurring support for

direct government production of anti-bacterial warfare drugs.

A government-owned plant would be operated by a contractor ``to manufacture a

variety of vaccines to address the most likely and deadly spectrum of threats

to our soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen,'' Deputy

Defense Secretary Rudy de Leon told a Senate panel Wednesday.

Such a facility would take five to six years to set up, de Leon told a Senate

Armed Services Committee hearing. Getting a second commercial source could

take from two to four years, and getting approval for vaccine that has

already been produced will take several months, he said.

Top Pentagon civilian and military officials will consider government vaccine

production at a budget meeting later this month.

Facing a vaccine shortage, the Pentagon has reduced its inoculations against

the deadly anthrax by 80 percent after spending close to $100 million to

fully protect only a small fraction of the force from the odorless, colorless

bacterium the military fears will be used as a weapon by America's enemies.

For now, the only shots are for those considered most at risk: soldiers in

Korea and the Middle East.

Sen. Tim Hutchinson, R-Ark., said he generally opposes government taking over

private enterprise, but government control over vaccine production may be

needed since private production has failed.

``We're leaving our men and women in the military vulnerable by scaling back

this program,'' Hutchinson said.

Much of the money spent thus far is going to BioPort Corp., a Lansing, Mich.,

company with 210 employees that has failed to meet Food and Drug

Administration requirements and has yet to manufacture a single dose that can

be used by the military.

The company tends a dwindling stockpile of the vaccine, and it has produced

up to 3 million new doses it hopes to make available when the FDA approves

its work, possibly later this year, said spokeswoman Rossman-McKinney.

The FDA recently refused to clear 800,000 doses of the stockpiled vaccine

because of irregularities in potency tests. The company also failed to meet

FDA requirements for its refurbished plant. It plans to resubmit its license

application by the end of August.

With BioPort running out of funds, the Pentagon agreed last year to amend its

original $29.1 million contract, giving it $24.1 million in ``extraordinary

contractual relief,'' including an $18.7 million interest-free advance

payment for vaccine. The number of doses it must provide was cut in half and

the price per dose doubled for the first year and more than quadrupled for

the second year.

``Despite all the challenges, we are confident ultimately the FDA will

license our facility and we will be back in the business of manufacturing a

safe, pure and effective vaccine for the U.S. military,'' said

Rossman-McKinney in an interview.

Responding to a possible government takeover of all manufacturing,

Rossman-McKinney said the company was prepared to discuss anything that would

meet military needs for the vaccine. She said the company now operates

without a profit.

Committee Chairman Warner, R-Va., said it is unlikely another private

manufacturer will want to get into the business because it may not be

profitable.

The military still plans to inoculate all 2.4 million of its employees

worldwide with the full course of six doses and annual boosters of the

anthrax vaccine. So far, about 1.8 million doses have been given to some

455,000 men and women. Some soldiers have been disciplined for refusing to

take it.

Rep. Shays, R-Conn., called for immediate suspension of all

mandatory anthrax vaccinations and a review of any disciplinary cases

stemming from them.

On the Net:

Pentagon anthrax program: http://www.anthrax.osd.mil

BioPort: http://www.bioport.com

AP-NY-07-12-00 1803EDT

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Loose Reins on Nurses in Drug Abuse Program

by Weber and Ornstein, ProPublica - July 25, 2009 12:31 am EDT

Anette Ekelius was able to covertly get jobs at hospitals--and steal drugs--while in the California's program for substance abusing nurses. Center-right: Carol Stanford, who has directed the board's diversion program since 2006, presents a painting done by a program graduate to Ruth Ann Terry, who was executive officer of the Board of Registered Nursing at the time this photo was taken in June 2009. Terry resigned after a ProPublica and Los Angeles Times investigation revealed flaws in the nursing board's oversight (Liz O. Baylen / Los Angeles Times)The morning of her second day at Starpoint Surgery Center in Studio City, nurse Melony Currier was found in the parking lot, passed out in her car.

Once roused, she was escorted to a drug-testing facility to provide a urine sample. In the restroom, she injected an anesthetic she had stolen from the surgery center, according to state records and a Starpoint official.

Currier, a participant in the state's confidential recovery program for impaired nurses, had failed repeatedly -- and spectacularly -- at rehabilitation, the records show.

Over 4 1/2 years, she'd been discovered high in her car at a Hollywood hospital, stolen anesthetics at a San Valley hospital, been convicted of burglary after taking more drugs from the same hospital and flunked a drug test.

Melony Currier was convicted of stealing drugs from the health facilities she worked at.Yet it wasn't until Currier shot up at the drug-testing facility in September 2006 that she was kicked out of the recovery program. Though her evaluators labeled her a "public risk," the California Board of Registered Nursing didn't impose discipline until 1 1/2 years later, leaving her free her to work without restriction in the interim, the documents show.

As the state begins overhauling regulation of California's 350,000 registered nurses, one of the board's most touted programs stands out as seriously troubled: drug diversion.

For years, nursing board officials have described diversion as a haven where good nurses can kick bad habits -- without losing their licenses or their reputations.

But an investigation by ProPublica and the Los Angeles Times found participants who practiced while intoxicated, stole drugs from the bedridden and falsified records to cover their tracks.

Since its inception in 1985, more than half the nurses who have entered the program haven't completed it. Some who fail at diversion are deemed so incorrigible that the board labels them "public safety threats" (sometimes referred to as "public risks").

Based on a review of all nurses who faced disciplinary action since 2002, The Times and ProPublica identified more than 80 such nurses [1].

Dire as they sound, the labels do not trigger immediate action or public disclosure. Some nurses that the board considers dangerous continue to treat patients.

"These healthcare professionals may be in the operating room. They may be serving you when you're sick," said A. Kenna, an addiction researcher at Brown University. "You just don't want that sort of person who's impaired" at the bedside.

Earlier this month, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger replaced most of the nursing board and demanded wholesale reform after The Times and ProPublica reported that it took more than three years on average to investigate and discipline nurses. The newly appointed board meets for the first time Sunday and Monday.

Confronted with reporters' findings on the diversion program this week, State and Consumer Services Secretary Fred Aguiar answered nearly every question by saying the program was part of a "broken system." Aguiar, whose agency oversees professional licensing, promised it would be on the new board's agenda.

In a separate interview, Carol Stanford, who has directed the diversion program since 2006, vigorously defended it. She said reporters were focusing too heavily on nurses who failed and not enough on those "saved" by diversion.

"You can pick apart any program," she said. "But what about the good? What about the other side of that story?"

Stanford said the program, which nearly 1,400 nurses have completed since 1985, had a graduation rate of 59% last year.

"Of course, nothing's perfect," she said. "We're working on whatever issues might be going on."

Diversion, embraced in various forms by many regulators, is intended to protect both professionals and the public.

See the Los Angeles Times and ProPublica database of more than 2,000 sanctioned nurses[2] Nurses enroll voluntarily, sometimes after a complaint, sometimes before they land in trouble. They agree to a host of conditions, such as submitting to random drug tests, seeking treatment and pledging not to work without permission.

In return, the board suspends the disciplinary process, keeping secret the nurses' participation in the program. With an annual diversion budget of nearly $3 million, it relies on an outside contractor to run the program day to day.

Because the program is confidential, it is impossible to know how many enrollees relapse or harm patients. But a review of court and regulatory records filed since 2002, as well as interviews with diversion participants, regulators and experts, suggests that dozens of nurses haven't upheld their end of the bargain. And oversight is broadly lacking.

Nurses must promise they won't work until they're sober, yet the board doesn't confiscate their licenses, nor does it ensure that addicts have kept their word.

Some covertly get jobs and steal drugs. The board typically doesn't find out until the nurse gets in trouble again.

Even after the program expels nurses and labels them public safety threats, the board takes a median 15 months to file a public accusation -- the first warning to potential employers and patients of a nurse's troubles. It takes 10 more months to impose discipline, based on the Times/ProPublica review of disciplinary records filed since 2002.

After being kicked out of the diversion program, Fahrni logged at least two drug-related arrests before the board filed an accusation against her.Labor and delivery nurse Fahrni, who originally enrolled in the program after stealing and using painkillers, said she was kicked out and labeled a "public risk" in December 2005 because she had worked without permission. But the board didn't file an accusation against her until January 2009.

During that time Fahrni logged at least two arrests on drug-related charges, though she says she did not work as a nurse.

"They terminate you. They say you're a danger to public society . . . then it takes three more years for them to do anything," she said.

The nursing board "should have been all over me like a hawk," Fahrni said. "An addict -- you got to watch them like a baby."

nne D'Angelo Fellmeth, administrative director of the Center for Public Interest Law at the University of San Diego, said every "public risk" case should be pursued within five days.

Nurses "treat how many dozens of patients?" she said. With such delays, "the chance for harm to a patient is exponentially multiplied."

Drug convictions

In retrospect, Melony Currier may not have been a good candidate for diversion.

She first landed in trouble on Nov. 8, 2001, when she was arrested for stealing Demerol from Providence St. ph Medical Center in Burbank. (She later told board investigators that she'd stolen drugs every day for months.)

Nearly two weeks after her arrest, while working at Planned Parenthood in Van Nuys, she was found collapsed in the bathroom, injecting herself with the general anesthetic propofol. Two days after that, she returned to Providence St. ph and stole more of the drug, board documents say.

She was later convicted of misdemeanor theft in the Van Nuys case and petty theft and drug possession in the Burbank case.

Currier, then known by the last name Dietrich, was allowed into diversion in February 2002. The program bars nurses who have been convicted of selling drugs or who have caused patient harm or death. Also rejected are those previously disciplined by the board for drug use or mental illness, and those previously kicked out of any diversion program.

None of this applied to Currier. When the program finally expelled her in 2006 -- after the five relapses -- her case entered the clogged pipeline of ordinary complaints. There it was investigated outside public view.

A month after Currier was ejected, according to board documents, she went to Providence St. ph, where she'd been arrested five years earlier. Posing as an employee, she said she'd come to collect drugs for outpatient surgery.

When questioned, she "fled," board records say, driving 10 miles to Verdugo Hills Hospital in Glendale. Again posing as an employee, she stole two cases of propofol, according to court and board records.

Two days later, on Oct. 18, 2006, Currier was arrested when she returned to Verdugo Hills for more.

The board filed a public accusation against Currier in March 2007-- nearly 5 1/2 years after the agency first learned of her drug problems.

When the board settled the case in 2008, Currier's license was suspended for a year and she was put on probation. As part of the settlement, she admitted the allegations.

Currier is now free to practice with restrictions. She has declined to comment on her case.

Asked about delays in cases like this, in which a nurse has been deemed a public risk, diversion manager Stanford said: "That nurse still has due process. . . . You cannot go after a registered nurse in this state for falling out of treatment."

In some other states -- Arizona, Texas, North Carolina and Ohio, for instance -- nurses are booted from diversion much more quickly and disciplined sooner, according to interviews with regulators there.

"You can't stay in the program after one relapse, even one," said , executive director of the North Carolina Board of Nursing.

Leonard LaBella, Verdugo Hills Hospital's chief executive, said he was dumbfounded that the California board had not moved against Currier sooner.

"They might be overwhelmed," he said. "But this one, I think, might have floated to the top."

Risky honor system

At the moment, the main person responsible for protecting the public from a drug-addicted nurse in California is the drug-addicted nurse. It's a risky honor system.

Anette Ekelius, who landed in diversion for allegedly stealing drugs in April 2001, said she knew the rules -- she couldn't work without the board's permission. She also knew there was nothing to stop her. "I thought, 'This is good,' " she recalled. " 'I need to work. I need to pay my bills.' "

Ekelius got an unauthorized job as a temporary nurse at Torrance Memorial Medical Center that September, according to court records. She later pleaded guilty to stealing Demerol on her first -- also her last -- day. The hospital reported her to the board, but she remained in diversion.

Months later she took another job without permission, she said in an interview. At Corona Regional Medical Center, she appeared high and was accused of leaving a critically ill patient unattended, board records say.

Two days later, in February 2002, she was kicked out of diversion. She got another job and stole drugs before the board filed an accusation against her. Her license was revoked in August 2004 [3].

"I was a good nurse, but not when I was using, obviously," said Ekelius, who said she is now sober.

Diversion manager Stanford said she doubted there were more than a handful of such cases but conceded she has no way of knowing for sure.

Doctors program

California regulators well know that diversion programs can fall dangerously short.

In recent years, audits of the state medical board's program found that relapsing doctors weren't always removed from practice, surprise drug tests often weren't surprises and designated monitors sometimes left doctors unwatched.

The medical board closed the 27-year-old program last year.

At legislative hearings on the matter, nursing board officials insisted that their program did not have the same problems and was "very successful."

But the board often defines success as completing the program. By that measure, it has lagged behind the medical board. Historically, about three-fourths of doctors who entered diversion finished it.

And the nursing board does not track nurses once they complete the program. Bertrand, a Claremont nurse anesthetist, relapsed three months after graduating. In August 2005, he was caught injecting himself during a surgery with the painkiller fentanyl, which was intended for the patient. Afterward he admitted using opiates every workday for 10 to 12 weeks, according to his board disciplinary record [4].

Given a second chance at diversion, he was kicked out, according to his board record. Last year the board suspended his ability to work as a nurse anesthetist for one year and put him on probation [5].

Reached twice by telephone, Bertrand said he was busy and never called back. The board almost certainly misses other cases like Bertrand's, addiction experts said.

"I'd want to know what their relapse rate is," said Dean Dabney, a criminal justice expert at Georgia State University, who has written about impaired practitioners. "That's your true indicator."

In this week's interview, Stanford initially stuck to her overall assessment of her diversion program as "a success."

Pressed on the flaws identified by reporters, however, she said officials were taking steps to "tighten it up."

One change in process, she said, is a requirement similar to that in New York -- in which new enrollees in diversion inactivate their licenses. Another would allow the state to investigate complaints even while nurses are in diversion, as the state of Washington does. A third would expedite legal action on cases in which nurses are considered "public safety threats."

"You're raking me over the coals," Stanford said to reporters. "I'm trying to work with the program to enhance it."

A fatal overdose

Chad Matheny's newspaper obituary said he died unexpectedly at his Cathedral City home May 19, 2008.

Chad Matheny died after a long struggle with drug addiction. His mother accuses the nursing board of doing nothing to restrict his ability to work.Just 32, Matheny was described as a loving husband and father, a musician and singer, a dedicated nurse and caregiver. Left unsaid: Matheny's death came after a years-long battle with drugs.

It was a fight the nursing board knew he was losing.

An autopsy found that he had died of an accidental overdose: of powerful painkillers, antidepressants and anti-anxiety drugs. Some of the drugs appeared to have been obtained by phoning prescriptions in under the name of the physician he worked for, the autopsy report said.

Matheny had been booted from the diversion program two years earlier, and the board had labeled him a public threat, saying he had a "complete lack of insight into addiction." But, with disciplinary proceedings pending [6], he could still work -- and score drugs. He died in bed, beside his wife.

Matheny's mother, Gaytha Minor, said the nursing board failed her son. But she is a veteran nurse herself -- and what most angers her is that the board didn't step in to protect the public.

"How many patients suffered because of my son?"

Maloy [7], of the Los Angeles Times, contributed to this story

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This story can be found on the web at the following address:http://www.propublica.org/feature/loose-reins-on-california-nurses-in-drug-abuse-program-725/

Links

1. http://projects.propublica.org/nurses/list/nurses/public_risk

2. http://projects.propublica.org/nurses

3. http://projects.propublica.org/nurses/nurses/529523

4. http://s3.amazonaws.com/propublica/assets/docs/bertrand_scott_DOC001.PDF

5. http://projects.propublica.org/nurses/nurses/538006

6. http://projects.propublica.org/nurses/nurses/637707

7. http://articles.latimes.com/writers/maloy-moore

8. http://www.propublica.org/special/propublica-daily-email

9. http://www.propublica.org/feature/when-caregivers-harm-california-problem-nurses-stay-on-job-710/

10. http://www.propublica.org/feature/california-nursing-board-executive-officer-ruth-ann-terry-resigns-714

11. http://www.propublica.org/feature/schwarzenegger-replaces-most-of-state-nursing-board-713

This investigation [9] was co-published with the Los Angeles Times and also appeared in that newspaper throughout 2008 and 2009.

7/14/2009: Nursing Board Executive Officer Resigns [10] 7/13/2009: California Gov. Schwarzenegger Replaces Most of Nursing Board [11]

Our Complete Coverage

The Los Angeles Times and ProPublica have conducted a joint investigation into the failed oversight of California's health professionals. Read our complete coverage here. Ask the reporters by email about the series

Search the Sanctions

California Sanctioned Nurse Database - The Los Angeles Times and ProPublica compiled a database of more than 2,000 California nurses who have been sanctioned since 2002. Search by type of punishment, date of action, and nurse's name.

Multimedia

Interactive Graphic: At least five employers complained to the California Board of Registered Nursing about Carolyn Fay . The board did not revoke her license until August 2005. Follow ' case (Los Angeles Times)

Interactive Graphic: ph Kinney's problems with substance abuse continued well after he entered California's drug diversion program in May 2005. Follow Kinney's case (Los Angeles Times)

Chart: California takes far longer to discipline registered nurses than many other large states, according to a review by the Los Angeles Times and ProPublica. Click the graphic to see the full details. (Los Angeles Times) Interactive Chart: About the Board - The California Board of Registered Nursing oversees the education, licensure, practice standards and discipline of the state's 350,000 nurses. Note: Most of this board has been replaced in the aftermath of our investigation. (Los Angeles Times)

Profiles

Spencer Sullivan - In the prime of his life, Spencer Sullivan was rendered a quadriplegic. It took the nursing board more than six years later to revoke the license of a nurse involved in his care. Read more | LA Times Audio Slideshow Caitlin Greenwell - Caitlin Greenwell's family alleges that she suffers from cerberal palsy because nurses neglected to monitor her during her birth. LA Times Audio Slideshow Dr. Iraj Zandi – During a surgery, Dr. Iraj Zandi discovered that a nurse had stolen painkiller drugs intended for his patient. He found out later that the nurse had been accused of pilfering drugs from a previous employer. Read more... Glaubach – Glaubach’s nurses missed crucial signs of a life-threatening complication during and after childbirth, her family alleged. She died. The nursing board absolved the nurses. Read more...

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