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The Diversion Program Pros and Cons

Diversion Program Frequently Asked Questions

DIVERSION FAQ’s

Q.           I received a letter from the Board of Nursing offering me the Diversion Program because I am being accused of taking medication from my facility because of some waste discrepancies. What should I do?

                A. This a very personal decision: if you did take the medication for personal use because you have a dependency problem, then the Diversion Program would be a good option. However, if you just have some meds that can’t be accounted for and you did not take them, then Diversion will not be a good choice and you should call a lawyer right away (preferably us, because we know this stuff!)

Q.           What is the BRN’s Diversion Program?

                A. It is a “confidential recovery program” that is outsourced to a company called Maximus and is intended to help nurses overcome addictions or mental health issues. Please bear in mind that the Diversion Program is ONLY confidential if you remain in it and successfully complete it.

Q.           What would happen if I begin Diversion and then decide it is not right for me?

                A. Everything that you tell your Maximus case coordinator and everything in your file will be turned over to the enforcement unit of the Board of Nursing and used as evidence to discipline your RN license.  You must sign a waiver of confidentiality when you are admitted. You are also not entitled to your own file.

Q.           I’ve heard that I cannot work when I am in the Diversion Program; is this true?

                A. It is true. Your license is placed on INACTIVE status as soon as you are admitted to the program. We have had clients who were accidentally placed on inactive status just for speaking to the Diversion coordinator. Please carefully way all of your options and get all of the information regarding the Diversion Program before you call to speak to them.

Q.           Do I have to reply to the offer of Diversion? What happens if I just ignore it?

                A. If you answer them and decline or ignore it, you will likely have the same result.  If the Board has any information that you’ve had a DUI, taken medication from your facility, falsified a prescription, wasted medication improperly, gave improper doses to patients, have your own properly prescribed narcotic pain medication, has evidence of pyxis discrepancies, etc, you will receive a formal accusation from the Board of Nursing.

Q.           I am being offered the Board of Registered Nursing Program’s Diversion Program and I have no idea why.

A. If the Board has received any tips or has information that you’ve had a DUI, taken medication from your facility, falsified a prescription, wasted medication improperly, gave improper doses to patients, have your own properly prescribed narcotic pain medication, has evidence of pyxis discrepancies, etc, this will lead to an investigation. The Board takes any drug or alcohol related matters very seriously and they will investigate. The most important thing that you can do to protect yourself is get the help and support of an attorney. Remember, the hospital or facility has all the charts, all the records, all the proof. All you have is your word and hopefully, your lawyer.

Why CODE § 2770.12 Should Scare the Scrubs Off You

RNG recently discovered what an absolute omniscient hold the BRN’s Diversion Program has over their Nurse Participants, so much so that a nurse can’t even get her own records to exonerate herself from a disciplinary proceeding that will forever ruin her career.California Registered Nurse (RN) with license Problem

A terrified nurse recently contacted us because her California RN License had been subject default revocation and as a result, she has been contacted by the Office of the Inspector General and is being considered for the Federal Department of Health and Human Services List of Excluded Individuals/Entities (LEIE).  Meaning she is done- forever- having anything to do with healthcare in the United States… I’m sure you can understand her terror.

I’m not going to lie to you, when I found out that she had been contacted by the OIG and was being considered for the Exclusion List (LEIE), I assumed she must have done something really atrocious. Even with the hundreds of nurses we advise, we don’t come across the Exclusion list (LEIE) very often. As it turns out, her original offense was rather innocuous in comparison to many of our cases:

She was accused of diversion of opiate pain killers, on 2 separate instances. She confessed to taking the pills and was offered the BRN’s diversion program, which she gladly accepted because she was suffering from severe depression, was in a physically abusive relationship and wanted all the help she could get.  After 5months, the Diversion Case Manager released her to go back to work. Her performance evaluations were great, all of her drug tests were clean and after 2 and half years, the finish line was in sight.  But then she got sick.

She failed a number of urine drug tests because of “dilutes”, which seemingly- could be easily explained by her intestinal problems and the fact that she couldn’t keep anything of substance in her body, all of which was verified by her doctor. The Diversion Program kicked her out anyway, a few months away from completion. Down to 95 pounds, sick, dejected and now jobless, our client gave up on her dream of sunny California and she returned home to Michigan to be with her mom.

In the mean time, the Board of Registered Nursing found out that our client had been dismissed from diversion and so they begin an investigation for the original 2006 diversion of drugs. She responds to the initial investigation letter and explains to the Board that she would have completed diversion except for the illness, provides a letter from her doctor substantiating all of her claims and crosses her fingers. It wasn’t enough. The Board files the formal accusation calling for revocation or suspension of her RN license and at this point she’s had enough. She’s tired of fighting with California and she is never planning on returning so she doesn’t respond to the accusation and her license is finally revoked in May, 2011 by default. Sadly, had she called us during the investigation or even the accusation stage we could have helped her, and maybe that is why I feel so terrible for her now and why we are determined to keep her off the Federal Department of Health and Human Services Exclusion List (LEIE).

She hears from the Office of the Inspector General in July. If the OIG feels that the “crime” prevented the delivery of health care services to a patient then they consider that healthcare provider for the exclusion list. Because our client took meds that were signed out for a patient, they are able to equate the incident to their requirements. The OIG is allowing our client 30 days to provide them any information that could help sway their decision.

That is fantastic news! Because the OIG and Department of Health and Human Services are not aware of any of the other circumstances surrounding the diversion of the medication, our clients 2 ½ year stint in diversion and that it was an illness that caused her dismissal, we feel very confident that the OIG will drop the matter. All we need is our client’s file from Diversion to prove to the OIG that she was perfect while in diversion and never once, in the 2 ½ years following the incident, did she have a dirty drug test.


This is when you need to hold on to your scrubs: According to CAL. BPC. CODE § 2770.12 : California Code - Section 2770.12, our client is not allowed to get her file; as her attorneys, we can’t even have it subpoenaed.

(b)All board and committee records and records of a proceeding pertaining to the participation of a registered nurse in the diversion program shall be kept confidential and are not subject to discovery or subpoena.

But according to CAL. BPC. CODE § 2770.11 : California Code - Section 2770.11 (b), the BRN can use the file and any information contained within it, to discipline the nurse:

(b)If the program manager determines that a registered nurse, who is denied admission into the program or terminated from the program, presents a threat to the public or his or her own health and safety, the program manager shall report the name and license number, along with a copy of all diversion records for that registered nurse, to the board's enforcement program. The board [BRN] may use any of the records it receives under this subdivision in any disciplinary proceeding.

Time and time again we’ve seen the BRN cite a Nurses Diversion File in order to discipline the nurse, including admissions of chemical dependence, depression or “mental illness”. Diversion case managers have been expert witnesses for the Deputy Attorney General during Hearings and have aired all the Nurses most personal confessions, thoughts, fears, psychological exam notes and rehab information. But the nurse herself, has no right to her own file. The nurse’s attorneys have no right to the file. The metaphorical smoking gun is right there—and we can’t get it to prove that our client wasn’t the one that pulled the trigger.

It is quite possible that our client will be placed on the Exclusion List. Without the proof that she was never addicted to opiates, nor did she ever show positive for a drug test in 2 ½ years following the incident, all we have is her word against the Boards and the facts that we have access to, are not in her favor.

If you are considering the BRN's Diversion Program, are under investigation by the BRN for a drug or alcohol issue or a DUI, have been contacted by the OIG for consideration for the Exclusion List (LEIE), please call us first. It is imparitive that you know all of your options and have all the facts. We can help. 800-506-9766.

 

What Happens If A RN Diverts From Diversion?

 

RN Guardian’s Panel Attorneys, Goyette & Associates’ have  recently represented a number of Nurses who have either withdrawn or been removed from the Board of Registered Nursing’s Diversion Program.

G&A attorneys have actually begun advising our clients that surrendering their license may be the best option, and we’ve been hearing that more and more frequently when it comes to DUI or Drug issues. You see, nurses with a chemical dependency problem can battle an addiction for years with in-patient programs, out-patient programs, NA/ AA … any A you could think of. They stay clean for a few months and then relapse.  Many enlist the help of the BRN’s diversion Program at this time, but it turns out that seeking help from the one group who is supposed to be their  biggest advocate, can turn out to be the biggest mistake they could have made.

The BRN’s Diversion Program is no-nonsense and they very strictly adhere to the AA/ NA model of recovery:

·         90 meetings in 90 days

·         Finding a sponsor with 5 years of sobriety

·         Working the 12 Steps

·         Going to Nurse Support Groups

·         Calling in daily for random Drug testing

·         Submitting to drug tests as required

·         Meeting periodically with a case coordinator

·         Submitting to a psychological exam

·         Sticking with the program until the program itself deems one “recovered”

Obviously this model has not worked for all of our RNG Members before. They have done all of the above. They have done them all many times. But there is alternative mode of treatment called Medical Management, where the nurse meets with a Psychiatrist and is diagnosed. The subsequent medication prescribed can diminish cravings and enable the nurse to remain clean and sober. The Diversion program will encourage Medical Management, but only after an internal referral from a BRN psychiatrist which of course requires a full disclosure of all behavioral issues, drug and alcohol additions, etc.

The problem with Diversion arises  if the nurse is kicked out of Diversion for non-compliance or withdraws on their own. The BRN can then use one’s own self –referral against them. They can use everything the nurse discloses to the Diversion’s Case Manager. They can use all the records the nurse has allowed them to obtain. They can use the nurse’s own physiological evaluations against them and they can do all of this legitimately because the RN must sign a waiver in order to be admitted to the Diversion Program in the first place.

These cases are especially heartbreaking for me because I develop relationships with and get to know our Members over the years as I manage their cases.  They are exactly the kind of people who should be nurses. I believe so fully in their abilities and natural propensity as caregivers that if I had a choice and could pick a nurse, I would pick one of them as mine. Yes, they have imperfect pasts. Yes, drug use is “substantially related to the Practice of Nursing” as is defined by the Nurse Practice Act.  But if a nurse seeks help for their issue, removes themselves from work so that they can get a grip on their addiction and then are eventually able to get sober, is this the kind of person who should have their license to be a nurse revoked? NO!!!

Make no mistake; I am not advocating that nurses who are the midst of battling a chemical dependency issue should be dealing with patients. I am not advocating that a nurse who harms a patient in any way because of impairment be allowed to continue practicing as a nurse. What I am saying is that RNs who recognize a dependency  problem, seek help for that problem and are able to overcome an addiction should not have their license to practice Nursing be revoked indefinitely.

I am also saying that it is an outrage that once a Nurse is either removed from or leaves Diversion, that everything they have disclosed becomes immediate fodder for a license revocation case against them. I’m saying that it is an outrage that a nurse’s Diversion Case Manager can be called as an expert witness in a BRN Hearing AGAINST the nurse. I’m saying that one mode of recovery may not work for everyone and that if it turns out that the Diversion model may not work for you; I would advise you to think very carefully about entering into the Diversion Program in the first place.

Our attorneys have been able to successfully negotiate with the Deputy Attorney General for Probation Settlements, Stipulated Surrenders or License Suspensions in lieu of revocation. The bottom line is that this is not something a nurse should go alone. If you are in Diversion and thinking of leaving, call us. If you have a dependency problem and are considering Diversion as a option, call us.  If the BRN is offering you Diversion as an alternative to Revocation or Probation, please call us. We can help.

 

Why The BRN's Diversion Program Doesn't Work

A Year Later: Why Diversion Doesn't Work

A few days ago I took a call from "Sarah," a RN who was fed up with the irrational demands of California's Nursing Diversion Program. She wanted out. Four days prior, I spoke with "Lucy," a RN who was considering Diversion because she didn't want to have her license revoked.

So What is the Answer?

It is important to understand all the variables.  Sarah chose to accept the Diversion program becasue she had an accusation against her license. There was no formal BRN investigation and the Board would not tell her what the accusation was for. Sarah assumes it stems from a DUI she received a year ago. She is not an alcoholic and did not feel that she was a good candidate for Diversion, but she chose to enroll to keep the accusation from going public and hoped to avoid license revocation.
A year later and thousands of dollars in debt, she wants out because the Program is mandating that she go into a 90 day inpatient program because she tested positive for alcohol in a ETG. She has not had a drop to drink, but because the Program uses a ETG for testing, she's showing positive for traces of alcohol; which can come from anything from soy sauce to hand sanitizer. The Board does not take this into account.
The inpatient program will cost about $20,000 and is completely irrational option for Sarah, who does not have a dependency problem. Where will Sarah come up with that money since she hasn't been able to work for the last year, as the Diversion Program mandates? She can't pay.  She has to quit diversion and accept the consequences, which will be an investigation into her license and a request by the Board that she either surrender it or they will revoke it.
Lucy, on the other hand called me and asked about her options after a DUI.  She wanted to know what the requirements of the Diversion program were, verses facing revocation. This is what I told her:

Diversion requirements include:

1. you can not work
2. you submit to drug/urine tests
3. you attend diversion mandated support groups
4. "completion" is based on the decision of the Board
5. usually takes 3 years or more to "complete"
6. the accusation remains anonymous
7. it can cost tens of thousands of dollars
If you face revocation with RN Guardian attorneys, you will keep your license but will have to face probation. A DUI or any drug/alcohol related conviction is a "revocable offense", but our lawyers have never failed in license retention for our members.

Probation requirements include:

1. you can work
2. you may have to submit to random drug/urine tests
3. you may be required to attend support groups
4. probation lasts for 3 years
5. you can appeal after 24 months
6. the accusation is public record and will be posted
7. it will cost about $6,000, if you're not a RNG member

So what is the answer for Lucy? It is a personal choice, but it should be an informed one. Please know if you are ever faced with making the decision between Diversion or fighting for your Regiistered Nurse license, we are here and you can make your decision based on legal precedent, sound advice from our lawyers and years of attorney experience . Call us at now at 916-851-1900 and speak to a lawyer right away. If you would like to share your thought or experiences with Lucy, please do so on the Forum. I'm sure she would be grateful.

October News: The Diversion Issue

NEWS
ProPublica Discusses The BRN's Diversion Program
 
ProPublica is the public watchdog group that incited public outcry last year with their piece on the Board of Registered Nursing:
 
Loose Reins on Nurses in the Drug Abuse Program
by Tracy Weber and Charles Ornstein, ProPublica: Nov, 2009.
 
Diversion, embraced in various forms by many regulators, is intended to protect both professionals and the public.
 [2]  enroll voluntarily, sometimes after a complaint, sometimes before they land in trouble. They agree to a host of conditions, such as submitting to random drug tests, seeking treatment and pledging not to work without permission.
 
In return, the board suspends the disciplinary process, keeping secret the nurses' participation in the program. With an annual diversion budget of nearly $3 million, it relies on an outside contractor to run the program day to day.
 
 

Alcohol Testing for Nursies Used by BRN's Diversion Program

Widely-Use EtG Test for Alcohol Unreliable
Cannot Distinguish Between Consumption and Exposure

By About.com Guide

Updated December 31, 2008

 What Is a EtG Test?

The EtG test is a biomarker test that detects the presence of ethyl glucuronide in urine samples. Usually, it is used to monitor alcohol consumption in individuals who are legally prohibited from drinking alcohol by the justice system or restricted from drinking by their employers.

The EtG test is just one of many biomarker tests available to confirm the presence of alcohol in urine samples. These tests are used to document abstinence and detect relapse, but they can also be used in clinical settings to screen for drinking problems, evaluate interventions for alcohol problems and motivate changes in drinking behavior.

 The Problem With the EtG Test

The EtG test is sensitive to the presence of any alcohol, even low-levels, and can detect alcohol in the urine several days after consumption. But the test is so sensitive, it can produce a positive test for ethyl glucoronide from the mere exposure to alcohol that is present in many daily use products.

The EtG test came under scrutiny when a significant number of people, who insisted they had abstained from drinking alcohol, failed the test. SAMHSA used many of those protested cases to research the accuracy of the EtG test and determine the cause of the false positives.

 What Causes False Positives?

According to SAMHSA's research, positive EtG tests can result from the use of hand sanitizers, medications, hygiene products, cosmetics, foods and other products that contain even small levels of alcohol. People can test positive for alcohol consumption after being exposed to laundry detergent, antiperspirant, aftershave and even hair spray.

There are hundreds of household products that contain ethanol, according to the National Library of Health's Household Products Database, which could possibly cause a false positive with the EtG urine test.

The advisory also said that gender, age, or ethnicity may also affect EtG test results, but more research is needed to find out for sure.

______________________________________________________________________________

*If you need to speak with a Registered Nurse (RN) attorney about testing positive for an ETG Urine test if you've had a DUI, call RN Guardian now at 916-851-1900. We provide hassle-free access to lawyers that specialize is Registered Nurse (RN) DUIs, Board of Registered Nursing License defense and we can save your RN license from revocation.

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