Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

23 more hospital workers fired in overdoses case

- KANTELE FRANKO

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The Ohio hospital system where excessive painkiller doses were given to dozens of patients who died fired 23 more employees Thursday and said it is changing leadership, a sign that profession­al fallout from the scandal has expanded far beyond the intensive-care doctor accused of ordering the drugs.

The announceme­nt by the Columbus-area Mount Carmel Health System comes five weeks after William Husel pleaded innocent to murder charges in 25 of the deaths, marking one of the biggest cases of its kind against an American health care profession­al.

The newly fired Mount Carmel employees include five physician, nursing and pharmacy management team members, President and CEO Ed Lamb said in a statement. One employee remains on administra­tive leave, and 11 are being given the chance to return to work if they complete additional training, he said.

Mount Carmel didn’t specify whether those employees are nurses and pharmacist­s who administer­ed or approved the excessive doses.

Authoritie­s have said the nurses and pharmacist­s involved aren’t being prosecuted, though dozens have been reported to their respective profession­al boards for review and potential disciplina­ry action.

Lamb also said that he is resigning this month and that Mount Carmel’s chief clinical officer is retiring in September, paving the way for new leadership that could “facilitate healing and help restore the trust of the community.”

Mount Carmel fired Husel in December and concluded that he had ordered potentiall­y fatal doses for 29 patients who died over the past few years, including five who might have received the drugs when there still was a chance of improving their conditions with treatment.

The hospital system said six more patients got doses that were excessive but likely not the causes of their deaths.

His lawyer in the criminal case has said Husel was providing comfort care to dying patients, not trying to kill them.

Husel was charged with murder only in cases involving 500 to 2000 micrograms of the powerful painkiller fentanyl, amounts far larger than typical doses.

Mount Carmel has tightened its drug policies and access, and publicly apologized, noting it should have expedited its investigat­ion. It acknowledg­ed that Husel wasn’t removed from patient care until four weeks after a concern about him was raised last fall and that three patients died during those weeks after getting excessive doses he ordered.

The hospital system has resolved some of the related wrongful death lawsuits, reaching nearly $4.5 million in settlement­s so far.

“We are deeply sorry for the additional grief and frustratio­n this has caused and are working to provide reasonable settlement­s with affected families,” Lamb said in the statement Thursday.

Twenty-two lawsuits remain pending.

In new filings this week, Husel’s lawyer in the civil cases again argued that they should be put on hold because of the criminal case.

A court magistrate previously declined to halt the lawsuits but did block the plaintiffs’ lawyers from pursuing a sworn statement from Husel. Lawyer Gregory Foliano argues that isn’t enough to protect Husel’s right to a fair trial, in part because plaintiffs still can seek informatio­n from other Mount Carmel employees.

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