State Wants Overprescribing Nurse to Receive a Harsher Punishment
State Wants Overprescribing Nurse to Receive a Harsher Punishment
Tennessee nurse practitioner Christina Collins, now 43, had prescribed a patient 51 pills a day in 2011, according to court documents, which show the daily dose included 32 methadone, eight Roxicode, four Soma, six Xanax and one Ambien. At one point, she was overprescribing so much she was the ninth highest prescriber in the state, and the Tennessee Department of Health argued her orders were “so colossal their only reasonable use would be drug trafficking or suicide.”However, despite her well-known excessive prescribing, the Tennessee Board of Nursing allows Collins to keep her license. She would eventually be sentenced to two years of probation but continued to work in the Knoxville area. State attorneys then challenged the decision in 2020, petitioning a county judge to order the board to take another look at the consequences imposed.In new arguments filed in that case, the attorneys state the previous decision should be tossed because one board member, Lee Ann Stearns, violated evidence protocols by doing her own research and presenting misinformation about opioid prescribing to other members. Stearns was then one of three board members who decided Collins’ probation terms.
Photo by Graham Ruttan on Unsplash
Sources:
Nurse prescribed ‘colossal’ amount of opioids, kept license through error, state saysFifty-one pills a day: Judge orders redo in trial of pain clinic nurse practitioner
About Sara E. Teller
Sara is a credited freelance writer, editor, contributor, and essayist, as well as a novelist and poet with nearly twenty years of experience. A seasoned publishing professional, she's worked for newspapers, magazines and book publishers in content digitization, editorial, acquisitions and intellectual property. Sara has been an invited speaker at a Careers in Publishing & Authorship event at Michigan State University and a Reading and Writing Instructor at Sylvan Learning Center. She has an MBA degree with a concentration in Marketing and an MA in Clinical Mental Health Counseling, graduating with a 4.2/4.0 GPA. She is also a member of Chi Sigma Iota and a 2020 recipient of the Donald D. Davis scholarship recognizing social responsibility. Sara is certified in children's book writing, HTML coding and social media marketing. Her fifth book, PTSD: Healing from the Inside Out, was released in September 2019 and is available on Amazon. You can find her others books there, too, including Narcissistic Abuse: A Survival Guide, released in December 2017.