Snohomish Nurse Sentenced To Prison For Stealing Pain Medication From Nursing Home
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  • Snohomish Nurse Sentenced To Prison For Stealing Pain Medication From Nursing Home

Snohomish Nurse Sentenced To Prison For Stealing Pain Medication From Nursing Home

Marzo 07, 2011
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For Immediate Release
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Phone Number: (571) 387-3831

SEATTLE - Jolene Larsen, 38, a Licensed Practical (LPN) at a Snohomish, Washington nursing home, was sentenced today in U.S. District Court in Seattle to a year in prison and three years of supervised release for tampering with consumer products. In her plea agreement dated November 11, 2010, Larsen admitted that between November 2009 and May 2010 she removed morphine sulphate from prescription vials and replaced it with tap water. Larsen then consumed the morphine. At sentencing, U.S. District Judge James L. Robart noted that Larsen stole drugs from hospice patients with limited time left. The medications were to alleviate their pain, to make their final days as pain-free as possible. The judge said Larsen had a duty to help these patients and instead her actions could have increased their pain.

According to the plea agreement, Larsen had worked at Merry Haven Care Center in Snohomish, Washington, for 14 years. Merry Haven is a nursing home and provides nursing services for long-term residents, rehabilitation services for individuals recovering from illnesses or surgery, and hospice for end-of-life patients. Larsen was a supervisor at the facility, overseeing a unit of patients and a group of nurses. Larsen was one of a limited number of people with access to a secure lock box for narcotic medications. One of her other responsibilities was the disposal of certain medications after patients no longer needed them. Larsen was to fill out paperwork recording that medications had been properly destroyed.

On multiple occasions, Larsen removed morphine sulfate from vials prescribed for patients and replaced the morphine with tap water. The morphine is removed from the vial with a syringe, but is taken orally. In at least one instance, the diluted morphine was administered to a patient. The patient’s pain was not treated until additional pain medication was provided. In another instance, an alert nurse noticed that the color of the morphine sulphate was lighter than it should be, so she used a different vial for the patient. Additionally, Larsen admitted she took morphine from the medications that were to be destroyed and consumed it.

The case was investigated by the Drug Enforcement (DEA), the Food and Drug Administration Office of Criminal (FDA-OCI), and the Snohomish Police Department.

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US Department of Justice - Drug Enforcement Administration

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