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10 Ways to Lose Your Nursing License

10 Ways to Lose Your Nursing License

NursingLink

Although we would like to believe that every nurse is a good person with good intentions, we can’t ignore the fact that every year, state nursing boards revoke dozens of licenses. While some of these men and women lose their ability to serve as nurses because of non-nurse related activities, others suffer the consequences of patient endangerment or worse. The threat of having your license revoked is ever-present, and it is important to know just what activities can take it away.

Of course, there are many more reasons your nursing license may be revoked, and the decision is ultimately up to your state board. Be sure to regularly familiarize yourself with your state’s laws and procedures.

1. Addicted Nurse Not in Good Recovery Program

2. Impersonating Another Licensed Practitioner

3. Diversion of Drugs

4. Providing a False Copy of License

5. Mail Fraud

6. Falsifying Patient Records

7. Unprofessional Conduct

8. Hosting a Pornographic Website

9. Patient Abuse and Neglect

10. Violating Probation


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    mumz57

    3 months ago

    2 comments

    You have to be very careful in nursing. A nurse can give a patient the wrong medication and the patient dies from it and all they get is a suspension and sometimes not even that. Then another nurse can clock in and out and not work the hours and have her license revoked and not be able to get it back. Where is the justice in that.

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    Krista1203

    3 months ago

    2 comments

    As a nurse of 26 years, since when do the Boards of Nursing make judgements on a persons personal life? Of course I have had injuries over the years due to CARING for patients! Yes, I do have to take pain meds, that are prescribed, at the end of the day at times. Why is this illegal? Do I not have the right to relieve myself of pain so that I can care for others? I would test positive for opiods, but never take them during a shift. And, so we suffer for the Board of Nursing! Get real people! We work hard, pull our backs, deal with herniated discs and degeneration and have the right to pain relief. I'm now tired of nursing, not because of patients, but the red tape big brother looking over our shoulders!

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    rrShyamala

    4 months ago

    10 comments

    informative

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    jginnetti

    4 months ago

    6 comments

    Boards of njursing are fallible. And they can be very, very arbitrary. Especially here in Connecticut.

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    mooncrystal

    4 months ago

    12 comments

    I agree with sugyka. If she didn't break any laws, why did her license get revoked. Isn't our sex lives (provided everything is consensual and no laws are being broken) our business, not theirs? Unless it’s child porn, porn websites are legal.

    So the question is, if we don’t fit their cookie cutter image (maybe they don’t like our body piercings or tattoos), we can get our license revoked?

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    djewel6

    4 months ago

    8 comments

    Sadly this is all too common an occurance. Im wary of it myself as a new nurse (roughly a year now) who already has back issues due to an injury suffered as a CNA but I know I worked too hard too long to get my license to risk doing anything stupid like meds which I shouldnt be on in fact Im even wary of meds I am legally prescribed lest I be seen as working under the influence..

    David Jewel LPN

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    kjagnew1

    4 months ago

    126 comments

    This adds to the long list of reasons why your license can be revoked. Its good info to know though. I'll definately pass this on

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    Tolulope

    4 months ago

    182 comments

    Ethico-legal issues, they are actually things we must abide by to get to the top in this noble profession.

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    Shan4691

    4 months ago

    5312 comments

    Very interesting peetce!

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    peetce

    4 months ago

    2 comments

    I found this online....very interesting:
    Nurses’ Duties in 1887

    The item below is from a newspaper clipping Lois Turley, RN, found in her mother’s old Bible. The clipping outlines the job description given to floor nurses by hospitals in 1887.

    In addition to caring for your 50 patients, each nurse will follow these regulations:

    1. Daily sweep and mop the floors of your ward, dust the patient’s furniture and window sills.

    2. Maintain an even temperature in your ward by bringing in a scuttle of coal for the day’s business.

    3. Light is important to observe the patient’s condition. Therefore, each day fill kerosene lamps, clean chimneys and trim wicks. Wash the windows once a week.

    4. The nurse’s notes are important in aiding the physician’s work. Make your pens carefully; you may whittle nibs to your individual taste.

    5. Each nurse on day duty will report every day at 7 a.m. and leave at 8 p.m. except on the Sabbath on which day you will be off from 12 noon to 2 p.m.

    6. Graduate nurses in good standing with the director of nurses will be given an evening off each week for courting purposes or two evenings a week if you go regularly to church.

    7. Each nurse should lay aside from each pay day a goodly sum of her earnings for her benefits during her declining years so that she will not become a burden. For example, if you earn $30 a month you should set aside $15.

    8. Any nurse who smokes, uses liquor in any form, gets her hair done at a beauty shop, or frequents dance halls will give the director of nurses good reason to suspect her worth, intentions and integrity.

    9. The nurse who performs her labors and serves her patients and doctors without fault for five years will be given an increase of five cents a day, providing there are no hospital debts outstanding.

    Source: Lois Turley, RN, works at an allergy clinic in Arkansas. She is a freelance writer. See Turley’s Web site at http://www.care-nurse.com.

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    BM3

    4 months ago

    8 comments

    "Perhaps the ability to sexualize vulnerable people is not the best thing for a nurse. If i were in hospital and i discovered a nurse who was caring for me was hosting a porn site, i would feel very vulnerable and uneasy. Being a Nurse is more than just doing a job. In the same way, I do not want police officers or Teachers hosting porn sites due to the implication regarding their personal preferences and mental make-up. Of course such professions demand scrutiny and seemingly judgmental standards other professions do not require. Even with all this additional scrutiny, too many nurse licenses are revoked due to inappropriate actions and behavior. It's simply a matter of seeing your behavior through the eyes of those you are supposed to be caring for. It's a matter of respect and confidence in your work and demeanor. If you don't or can't see it that way, you are in the wrong profession."

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    sugyka

    4 months ago

    6 comments

    Yet, we nurses not suppose to be judgmental. I worked in a hospital where the majority of the patients were prisoners. They got the same treatment as the rest of the population but we can lose our license for having a porn website. This is ridiculous. I became a nurse not a nun and what I do in my private life is my business.

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    Gomerer

    4 months ago

    2 comments

    Another sure way is to start talking about a union in your hospital. You may not lose your license but your going to lose your job.

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    NurseSandy

    4 months ago

    6 comments

    Lizabeth390..Thanks for your comment...I was beging to believe the our breed of nurses had died off and I missed it. Its nice to know there are others..and I know there are, that still feel compassion for someone else. But it was nice to see it here on this site....

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    NurseSandy

    4 months ago

    6 comments

    And about the whole porn site thing...Nurses also have an images to uphold. And showing your personals off on a website....Is not the image I mean. Dont any of you remember why you wanted to be a nurse to begin with? Didnt any of you overly self concerned nurses ever want to take care of (other) people...help them get better...Watch them progress or was it always about the money?

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