About a year ago a woman named Kristen Diane Parker, a surgery tech who worked in hospitals the Denver area, made the news, including on LawyersAndSettlements.com. I wrote a couple of short pieces about her. She was addicted—maybe still is—to Fentanyl.
Also known as Duragesic, Fentanyl is a prescription pain medication—quite a strong one—and quite an addictive one by all accounts. Kristen Parker was so addicted to the stuff that she would steal syringes from hospital surgery carts where she worked—syringes that were filled with Fentanyl—and inject herself. She would then fill the used syringes with saline and replace them. Just in case this isn’t crystal clear—post-operative patients were being administered saline in used syringes instead of their prescribed pain medication.
Ah, but it gets worse. Parker ended up infecting some 36 people with hepatitis C, a currently incurable viral infection which leads to chronic liver inflammation, and in some cases liver cancer. Parker, who shared needles when injecting heroine, is hepatitis C positive—something she claims she didn’t know when she was fixing her needles.
Thankfully, Ms. Parker got careless, and she got caught. No surprise there, given the state she must have been in: Fentanyl is 80 to 100 times stronger than morphine. Eventually, another hospital employee did become suspicious, but only after she was pricked by a needle protruding from Parker’s pocket. So she was fired from that hospital and hired less than a month later at hospital in Colorado Springs, just south of Denver.
Over the course of her work she put some 6,000 people at risk for hepatitis C. That’s nothing short of staggering.
If you recall Fentanyl patches—or Duragesic pain patches—were the subject of nationwide recalls as recently as 2008. People were nearly dying from overdoses of the drug that resulted from defected patches.
So how does a technician wander the halls of post-op high on Fentanyl and not get noticed? And how does she continue to slip through the cracks and get hired in hospital after hospital?
We may never know, but it is cause for concern. Prescription drugs are prescription for a reason and they are administered in hospitals presumably under the care of a physician. While the blame for the failure of the system to protect patients cannot be laid at any one person’s or department’s door, I am left wondering just how patients are supposed to protect themselves from this type of scenario if the system can’t? Ultimately, who is accountable? And more importantly—whose responsibility is it to try and remedy the flaws?
For the time being, it seems we are left with the justice system. This afternoon, Ms. Parker has her face on the front of MSNBC.com US News section because she is about to be sentenced to 20 years in prison on charges of tampering with a consumer product and obtaining a controlled substance by deceit or subterfuge. But where’s mention of the 36 people whose lives she has changed forever?
Hopefully she will die in prison. [Expletive removed] loser
I am not justifying this woman's actions, but this is all a result of no treatment available for drug addicts. If this woman was able to receive treatment and/or the drugs she is addicted to, innocent people would not be hurt. Drug and alcohol abuse effects everyone, one way or another, on many different levels. This is all controlled by people, some who are alcoholics themselves, who can go to a liquor store with a few dollars and get what they need.
Hi Lance, Thanks for your comment. I'm a huge believer in seeing all sides of an argument–and I do understand where you're coming from; additionally, I appreciate that you preface your comment by saying you don't justify her actions… But, at some point, personal responsibility has to kick in. Addiction to drugs or alcohol is very serious and often ridiculed, demonized or simply brushed under the carpet (hello enablers) which makes it, admittedly, very difficult for those who suffer from addiction to even have the courage to admit that they have a disease–or are suffering from an underlying disease such as clinical depression resulting in the use of drugs and/or alcohol–and need help. While I can intellectualize and "get" all that, once a addict's behavior begins to go from inwardly directed abuse to outwardly directed harm to others, I draw the line. This was not a woman who was ignorant or naive of the possible consequences of not only sharing needles, but also of not having patients receive the meds they truly needed. Granted, addiction can be more powerful than any amount of rational thinking, but you have to also factor in that Ms. Parker worked in hospitals! Where could you possibly have greater access to resources that could help get you on the path to rehab? From my perspective, it wasn't an issue of availability here, it was an issue of desire and readiness to get clean (or lack thereof). Maybe she hadn't bottomed out yet. Maybe she was subconsciously looking to get caught because she herself couldn't muster up the ability to say "I need help". Who knows. All I know is that help starts when a person is able to admit to themselves that they need help and they're willing to do whatever it takes–including some serious soul-searching, emotional upheaval, potential physical agony, and the unease of not knowing what the outcome of it all will be. Certainly not for the faint of heart, and apparently at the time not for Ms. Parker…
I cannot believe she had no care or concern for the very patients she was supposed to be providing safe care. I actually had a similar incident happen to me after having back surgery a few yrs ago. I was in excruciating pain & at times would get no relief from the injections I was allowed only ever 4 hours, of course the nurses didn't have any idea either that something was amiss, they just assumed I had a drug problem..But my hubbie and I started paying attention and noticed it only happened when a certain nurse was on duty & I requested a change in nurses, and had no more problems. A few months later she was shown on the news ( in handcuffs ) and being arrested for doing the same thing, taking my dose of pain meds and giving me probably saline. I wasn't the only patient that had complained about her and the hosp started an investigation. Thank goodness they did catch her & fortunately, she did use different syringes so no diseases were spread around. Shame on this woman for putting others at risk, not caring how many she may have sentenced to death because of her drug habit.
I agree with Lance that the individuals making the drug laws are more than likely alcoholics & think nothing of going to the liquor store and loading up on booze, yet someone like myself that now suffers from severe chronice pain from 7 back surgeries, cannot get anything for pain relief unless a Dr prescribes it and nowdays they are so controlled by the DEA and are afraid to prescribe enough meds to actually relieve pain, so thousands are way undertreated for pain. I choose not to use alcohol, but some do, or seek illegal ways to get pain meds or commit suicide because they can't take the never ending pain.
I think the DEA is a paranoid operation and not pretend the have a medical license and know how to practice medicine. Every Dr will tell his patients they are scared of losing there right to practice if the DEA thinks they are giving too many meds, even for legitimate, debilitating pain. something should be done..I hope the patients that were injured by her carelessness are doing okay.
I've had chronic pain for 5 years now and can't even get pain medicine for my problems. You go to the hospital with pain and they accuse you of being a drug seeker, not to mention I am only 24 years old, and the nurses who probably don't have any pain, just an addiction are going around stealing medicine?! That makes me sick to my stomach. Those are the same nurses who aren't believing that you have true pain. It really is horrible. There are treatments out there too. There's a relatively new medicine called suboxone that you can go to a doctor to get, how about methadone clinics? This woman could have gotten help but instead she infected countless people with hep C. I know that drugs alter your mind, but do they alter your heart, soul, and conscience too? She's a poor excuse for a woman who wasted her education and now her life, and that's just sad…
Want a follow up? During the case, it was said that a total of 32 people were infected but only after genome testing that only 16 were infected by female DNA wich means another 16 were infected by a male. Was there any attempt made to find who the male was? Is this person still infecting others? Have the authorities made any effort to find out???