This Just In – Hospitals Have a Legal Duty to Keep Dangerous Drugs From Known Drug Thieves
In November of 2009, Florida’s First District Court of Appeals ruled that Shands Teaching Hospital had a legal duty to protect Michelle Herndon from Oliver O’Quinn, a surgical nurse with a history of stealing controlled substances. O’Quinn murdered Herndon by injecting her with dangerous drugs. Propofol, Midazolam and Estomidate are available only by prescription.
At the wrongful death trial, the plaintiffs argued that Shands was negligent in hiring and supervising O’Quinn. A competent background check would have revealed his history of stealing drugs. In addition, Shands was informed by its employees that O’Quinn was stealing drugs and did not immediately dismiss him. Shands accepted his two weeks’ notice but did not restrict his access to the drugs.
Unfortunately, in that time, O’Quinn murdered Herndon with drugs stolen from Shands. O’Quinn had become infatuated with Herndon and injected her with the deadly drugs when she told him she was engaged to be married.
On appeal, the court ruled that a legal duty did exist because (1) Shands knew or should have know that the unsupervised release of hazardous, controlled drugs was dangerous; (2) a reasonable hospital would recognize that not implementing controls to keep dangerous drugs secure and supervised would expose the public to unreasonable risk of harm; and (3) Mischelle Herndon’s death was a foreseeable result of Shands negligent hiring and supervising of O’Quinn.
Though Shands did not know O’Quinn to have a violent history, the court ruled that his history of stealing drugs was enough to make harm to the public foreseeable to Shands in light of the hospital’s failure to secure its dangerous drugs.
The court explained that a legal duty exists where a general threat of harm to others exists. The threat of harm does not need to be specific to create a legal duty to protect.
“A common law duty is recognized, regardless of intervening criminal conduct, when a person’s actions ‘create “a foreseeable zone of risk” posing a general threat of harm to others.’… Moreover… the essence of the zone of risk is not the foreseeability of the specific injury that occurred, but whether the zone of risk poses a general threat of harm to others.’ See Hewitt v. Avis Rent-a-Car, 912 So.2d 682 (Fla. 1st DCA 2005)”
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