She isn't fit to be in charge of Sea Monkeys, how TF did she become a charge nurse? It feels as if she only worked in a jail to pass her own punishments, NOT to medically SUPPORT inmates during incarceration.
@JAY18927 ай бұрын
I know it’s not a laughing matter, but your sea monkeys comment had me laughing my ass off. As for the nurse, absolute negligence and she deserves jail time.
@broombromden4987 ай бұрын
It’s really not nice to be calling people sea monkeys.
@CandiceGoddard7 ай бұрын
I don't agree. She's a racist. Sorry to play the race card but there's a known stereotype about black people getting subpar healthcare due to a belief that we do not feel as much pain as other races.
@DeRockMedia7 ай бұрын
I was obsessed with sea monkeys as a kid, I brought my biggest one Stan to school once in a little travel container I bought from the sea monkey catalog...I wish my Target sold them again, I'd like to hatch a new community lol
@nm68187 ай бұрын
There is a ton of politics in nursing.
@REDACTED94947 ай бұрын
So he was being disruptive by pleading for his life? For 9 hours.
@Unhyphenated7 ай бұрын
Frankly, anyone on the floor at that time does not have clean hands when it became obvious that the charge nurse was doing nothing.
@junglekutz56257 ай бұрын
Well good! Now they're all on the same page (when it comes to knowing how irresponsible they really are). Standing by shooting the breeze and taking instruction that doesn't add up is what being an adult means to them. When being interviewed, they're claiming that they did this and that. Meanwhile the camera shows otherwise. 🤡🤡🤡
@LuchadorMasque7 ай бұрын
they're not allowed. it doesnt work like that--her word is law.
@DeRock4017 ай бұрын
@@LuchadorMasquebullshit. This is what the cops say when they defend a crooked cop. “ I couldn’t say anything”
@christopherdunn30947 ай бұрын
Don't go to jail and expect prompt medical care. He could've not been a criminal and probably survived this episode.
@shortcake89087 ай бұрын
@@christopherdunn3094orrrrr. We still treat criminals as humans.
@babyturkey83427 ай бұрын
Im a recovering heroin addict. Ive been clean about 5 years. This just shatters my hearr into pieces. I understand that drugs are illegal and an addict.Chooses to use these drugs but most addicts have trauma or mental illnesses. They need help. This is just inhumane
@WaltPDABADGUYАй бұрын
He wasnt detoxing he had an ulcer that ruptured to my understanding.
@hyacinthmoon62897 ай бұрын
My sister is a nurse at a prison and she gets into fights with the other nurses over this all the time. Her opinion is she isn’t there to judge people for their crimes, she’s there to save lives. Too bad not all prison nurses feel this way. Sickening.
@lissakaye6107 ай бұрын
Sounds like your sister is a great nurse then, and I feel for her. It is hard to actually care about your job and have integrity when others don’t.
@shebagemini7 ай бұрын
That’s great that’s how nurses should be empathetic, caring and respectful of individuals regardless of what they are. In reality this also happens in non jail settings like ER and hospitals believe it or not. They find people who ring bell and complain a lot disruptive and annoying. Some nurses today are really uncaring and doesn’t want to be bothered. They just chat in the nursing station or look at their phones smh
@coll44557 ай бұрын
Tell your sister Thank you!
@hyacinthmoon62897 ай бұрын
I sent these responses to my sister and yall made her day!! 🥰🤗
@PatienceHudnell7 ай бұрын
I have the sentiment as your sister 😓😢✨❤😇
@TeraByteify7 ай бұрын
Wait so she knew he'd been vomiting blood a few days prior? Is now complaining about pain in his guts, and she didn't think to even test his vitals? That's beyond incompetent.
@HumanABC7 ай бұрын
If you become this apathetic at your job, please quit.
Why would she quit!? Their still paying her to be bad at her worl
@93FilmsandMedia7 ай бұрын
@@Luvlymarshmellow666 if you’re a medical professional it’s a violation of the oath you take.
@trefaie6 ай бұрын
She got too used to her job. And then she let a couple bad apples dictate how she treats human beings. As a physician in an inner city, i find this lady deplorable
@janetmoquin78287 ай бұрын
She's a poor excuse for a " nurse" ! A man died because of her. Such a sad story to hear. That poor mans suffering had to be awful.
@NessaBunessa7 ай бұрын
This man had one of the worst deaths I can imagine. Slowing dying and suffering in pain for 9 hours with countless people around who can help you but who are all ignoring you on purpose.
@MissX9057 ай бұрын
And in their profession they know what a disruptive inmate looks like and how they act but this poor man was in serious medical distress. But they just put him in a padded cell, why? Couldn't one of them gone over the "nurse's" head and called a doctor in?
@zoinkersmate30537 ай бұрын
I’m signing that petition, she deserves to be charged for her neglectful actions
@kristinholsapple25875 ай бұрын
Tell me where to sign
@wowplayer005 ай бұрын
@@kristinholsapple2587 the link too the page is in the top page clik on the show more thing under the video.
@pmccoy89245 ай бұрын
Won't bring Unc back but they should get a hefty settlement, too.
@BeauTIFFul222 ай бұрын
I signed it today.
@daniellerasico2712Ай бұрын
Where do I sign???
@kellyfinleybrown93137 ай бұрын
I am an RN and have been one for 38 years. This person is no nurse. I am appalled and embarrassed by her behavior. There are just no words. I can't even listen to her lies.
@christopherdunn30947 ай бұрын
OK Karen. These are criminals who are constantly lying, exagerrating, and manipulating. You don't know what tf you are talking about. He should have kept out of trouble if he wanted good medical care.
@liquidbraino7 ай бұрын
@@christopherdunn3094If he cared about medical *anything* he wouldn't have died from a drug overdose. They didn't do this to him - he did it to himself. I'm not saying that all drug addicts are evil people who should be punished - just that he did it to himself. He could have just as easily died from an overdose inside his apartment or under a bridge somewhere but because it happened in a jail it suddenly becomes somebody else's fault.
@Findpepperbridge7 ай бұрын
When you are in a jail, I’m sure you become jaded. I’m not giving her an excuse. My mom has been a nurse for 30 years and still a charge nurse today at 65. She have never worked at a jail and she has become jaded. She still has empathy and way more than this woman. But you do become jaded.
@christopherdunn30947 ай бұрын
@@___erika Yeah Karen, the criminal happened to be telling the truth this time so let's throw the book at the poor nurse.
@feelingbetternaturally10997 ай бұрын
Despicable you @@christopherdunn3094
@emilykay1156 ай бұрын
Calling someone who's pleading for help as they're slowly dying in agony "loud and disruptive" repeatedly should be an additional criminal charge.
@acason47 ай бұрын
It's insane that they treat misdemeanor criminals like useless trash. All this man did was use an illegal drug & he died in a jail cell over it because no one had any compassion or interest in doing their job.
@rosalynjeffery95107 ай бұрын
Exactly 💯. I wouldn't hire her to take care of anything breathing that belonged to me. It's appalling that nothing was done to her. She kept stating he stinks. She has no compassion for no one and it didn't help that he was the wrong color. Smdh...
@johnd42707 ай бұрын
I bet she’s surprised the family is out there just cause you think someone’s trash doesn’t know still in the family thinks they’re trash and now they’re protesting so she got away with it but she’s gonna have to move
@girodeitalia22597 ай бұрын
At least now people don’t have to worry about getting ripped off by this drug addict
@sonjarygg23317 ай бұрын
He died alone AND with no clothes! 😢😢😢
@yvonnemukupa16707 ай бұрын
@@sonjarygg2331wriggling on the floor like an animal or worse than an animal 😢😢
@funkyfox79967 ай бұрын
"i don't even remember what he was saying" meaning she wasn't paying attention to a patient trying to communicate their troubles. not even bothering to process what he said
@jeannineharrelson12012 ай бұрын
Because of her lack of care, he's dead, and now his family will Own this crappy department!!
@rebbel677 ай бұрын
Disruptive > Trying to get attention for his excruciating pain.
@junglekutz56257 ай бұрын
She will find every professional excuse that will support her in ways that she can mask her evil mindset. What's actually interesting about everyone playing a position after the fact, is. Although the detectives are asking specific questions, they're already well aware of what took place. Her "answers", excuses and lies really just put her (as in her life) in a bind. No different than any criminal that is questioned. Whether or not they get arrested. She knows good and well what she did, what her intentions were and that she is lying through her teeth! Someone said that she was able to return to work. .....and that is fine. As having a job doesn't make you exempt from the deeds that you've done.
@freewithnature7 ай бұрын
@@junglekutz5625It’s not fine she’s returning to work. Imagine how many others she can and has hurt..
@TreeFreak7 ай бұрын
She sounds Australian. They don't really like those "darkies" very much. I'm pretty sure that came into this.
@louisehicks32857 ай бұрын
Yeah this lady has zero remorse. Her body language and her hand movements show that she didn't see that man as a human being!
@differenttakethanmost6 ай бұрын
It’s important to remember CONTEXT, the scene, the scenario, the history: people where she works cry wolf ALL DAY, EVERY DAY in hopes of putting off going to jail or trying to get out of it entirely. (Wouldn’t it be awesome if people just owned up to what they’ve done? Stepped up and were accountable 😂🤣😂. Better still: how about not breaking the law? There’s that. Or perhaps don’t do drugs. He’s where he is 100% bc of his own actions and decisions, but no one’s talking about that. 🤦🏻♀️) When you hear that crap day in and day out, you become immune to it, hardened to it. Think of your own job: something that seemed important on day 1 (say, customer service or safety protocol) seems irrelevant, an irritant or nonexistent two, five, ten years in. Ahhhh, the hell of hypocrisy.
@jingato7 ай бұрын
So the man was yelling out in pain, begging for help and her description of that is him being "disruptive"???
@lissakaye6107 ай бұрын
The charge nurse did not triage the gentlman, no vitals were taken, and her job is not to diagnose. Simply taking his pulse could have shown if he was faking his pain….
@junglekutz56257 ай бұрын
Typical know it all arrogance. Individuals like her tend to believe that having a job and having no real *current worries in their personal life, somehow make them exempt from up and going through something that's irreversible out of no where. The arrogance and presumption that you get to see in others, end up telling a tale that they're obviously clueless of.
@keeper64587 ай бұрын
Absolutely
@Charlesbjtown7 ай бұрын
What makes you believe that he's a "gentleman"?
@combatduckie7 ай бұрын
@@Charlesbjtown does it matter? Everyone should get life-saving medical help when urgently needed.
@Charlesbjtown7 ай бұрын
@@combatduckie You're missing the point. After too many false claims of pain/ can't breathe, I don't care who you are, there's a point to where you won't be so keen to believe what's said. I know I know...... you'll likely claim that you'd check each and every claim, but the reality is different.
@islaroyale82846 ай бұрын
I’m a nurse of many years, 15 in a large inner city ER, and I can proudly say in all my years in the medical field I’ve only come across a very few unempathetic nurses. It’s like any other profession, there’s bad seeds but they aren’t the majority thankfully. I’ve taken care of every kind of person there is, and my favorite people are the underdogs, the homeless, etc.. they can be the most appreciative and kind patients! I don’t judge, I can only imagine the hardships these people have faced in their lives to bring them to the place they are. If you start to lack compassion and basic kindness it’s time to reassess your profession! Jmo 🤷🏼♀️
@Super.Whimsy7 ай бұрын
Annaleen Visser murdered this man. And she’s not charged and allowed to practice medicine without issue. Disgusting.
@simonguerrero40917 ай бұрын
Nah I’m a nurse you can’t do anything just because people cry we can only do what the doctors orders are. This is completely the staffs fault for not alerting her about his change in condition he could have been saved if they checked him right n let her know he became unconscious definitely the staff that was suppose to check him every 15 min fault!!
@secondchance66037 ай бұрын
@@simonguerrero4091 So who was the doctor that ordered the charge nurse not to do anything? Oh wait the doctor doesn't exist because it was the charge nurse that was (apparently) in charge and you're no more of a nurse than an apple is an orange..
@Cease-gn2dk7 ай бұрын
@@simonguerrero4091 he had no water in 6 hrs that's crazy he was thirsty
@TheOnlyTexasNinja7 ай бұрын
@simonguerrero4091 it WAS her fault. She didnt take any vitals. She has an accent that sounds German. Those people have no feelings or compassion
@FucccGoogle7 ай бұрын
No value was lost
@EricFullwood7 ай бұрын
We investigated ourselves and found no wrongdoing.
@vinnyskum27577 ай бұрын
I had to get emergency surgery and blood transfusions due to a perforated ulcer while in the Navy back in '07. Despite the huge amounts of narcotic pain killers being pumped into me, the pain was agonizing. That poor man, without any pain relief, to die like that. That nurse is a fucking monster, and everyone of those people on that floor with any power are also culpable.
@Sansyr7 ай бұрын
She needs to be in jail and lose her licenses for extreme criminal malpractice. She single-handedly killed this man.
@izibear44625 ай бұрын
She needs jail then deported.
@sherilea50597 ай бұрын
I can’t imagine the pain this poor man felt. Disgusting negligence!
@tamra93967 ай бұрын
My question is if he got the help would he still be alive? This is very tragic. The charge nurse should be held accountable and her license should be revoked.
@madjack88937 ай бұрын
I watched a ER room filled with nurses arguing about who would be taking the elderly lady with dementia coming in from a nursing home via ambulance. One said, I’ve got no time for that, while stuffing a cupcake in her mouth while on her phone. All laughing and gossiping. Unreal. I was on a stretcher not too far from the elderly lady, who was unconscious? Sleeping? She didn’t move for hours. Hours she lay there wet and not even checked once in all that time. I made a complaint after and nothing absolutely nothing was done. I will never go there again. Poor woman.
@junglekutz56257 ай бұрын
Alot of people invest way too much energy and time depending on irresponsible wannabees to do right by them. In due time, they will be reminded of their fuckery and wish that they did right by those they did wrong. Eh......that's their business tho. As they usually don't have the spine to deal with whatever they eventually encounter.
@verosalgado78807 ай бұрын
If you’re alone in the hospital you have to be very very careful even if you’re not alone do you have to double check everything they do because they really don’t give a shit, Or they’re not paying attention or they’re distracted Oregon they simply don’t really care too much to double check everyone else’s work and that’s all mistakes and deaths happen the most at the hospital. Negligence all the way so preventable
@shebagemini7 ай бұрын
This is so true most of the deaths happens in hospitals because these nurses too afraid and lazy to deal with patients. I’ve seen it many times and they laugh about it saying they make a lot of money ignoring patients omg 😱. It’s very rare to see caring nurses nowadays just keep medicating your patients to get it over with. Do they really care about your life no, they care about their gossiping about nonsense more than attending to your needs. Some people are really disconnected with reality. No empathy compassion about human life. They only become nurse for the $$ not the job description or duties sadly
@RedceLL19786 ай бұрын
My uncle was in the hospital (Inspira Vineland, look up the Google reviews, One of THE worst hospital staffs in the United States) and on top of him having pneumonia, they inserted a catheter at 4pm and left it bleeding for hours until 1:30am when they called me saying the infection had progressed to sepsis and that he needed transfusions from the blood loss and they didn't think he was gonna make it. Two days of transfusions, the hospital had to pay for an extremely astronomically expensive clotting agent that one nurse told me nobody's insurance ever gets approved for and they had to go all the way up the chain to the top brass to get a urologist to the hospital at 2am. My uncle BARELY got out of that hospital with his life.
@PK-bh1ww6 ай бұрын
I worked in healthcare as far back as 1968 and I think the healthcare staff today are not nearly as good and caring as they used to be. They whine and complain about being over worked and want more $. I worked with less staffing than there is now and with no computers etc.. They're spoiled. There are some good workers but not as many as used to be. Seems they forgot the meaning of their title "care-giver".
@fiolds3507 ай бұрын
Imagine dying and being told your disruptive.
@jimmyohara26014 күн бұрын
YOU'RE, dopeY 🤦.
@suej81597 ай бұрын
Here is the thing ,EVEN if he was detoxing if he was in that much pain he should have been taken to a hospital ,detoxing can kill ,can cause organs to fail all sorts of things so no matter her excuse she failed him as a nurse. That said everyone else that was there ALSO failed and need to held accountable for not acting.
@fern14165 ай бұрын
Not a single person called an ambulance? You don't need any medical training to see he is in mortal agony, penile discharge, vomiting, screaming, passing out, unable to carry his own weight. This is disgusting
@ShroomedMisterCraft7 ай бұрын
A couple of years ago, I had an accident with poisoning. I was laying on the ground dying just like Wingo was. I barely survived and was in a coma for a month. It was the scariest feeling, knowing I was dying and being unable to move or get anybody's attention. I was saved by EMTs who arrived 6 minutes later. This nurse deserves life in prison. The terror Wingo went through isn't something that can be described, you have to experience it to even understand the gravity of the situation. This poor man. I'm going to sign the petition, and anyone who reads this should do the same.
@GiftedGaz787 ай бұрын
Where have I heard the excuse “I was just following orders” before ? All of them are responsible at some level in my opinion.
@AliValentine1436 ай бұрын
I agree, even as an Office Admin I wouldn't sit across from the cell of a man screaming in agony while the nurse does nothing. I'm sure there's retaliation in jails, just like cops tho.
@israel35387 ай бұрын
As a paramedic, I see this type of behavior from nurses all the time. Everything is BS to them. If someone tells you they can’t breathe, it’s so easy to just verify. Put them on capnography and get some vitals
@junglekutz56257 ай бұрын
Alot of these folk do these jobs for the pay. They're so incompetent and useless that they can't even execute what the job entails and demands. In order to be fairly be paid for their works and contribution. Instead, they'll pride themselves as being the one with the power to save and deprive. But too stupid to see the trajectory of such dumb actions.
@hydraxc24787 ай бұрын
I believe you. I have witnessed a sociopathic nurse turn off my grandmothers oxygen on her death bed. My father and I made her turn it back on. She simply said "I was trying something". Yeah she wanted to murder someone.
@kevinruiz41257 ай бұрын
Lazy nursing is becoming a plaque.
@2112Larry7 ай бұрын
They love to just say.." if you can talk, you can breathe ".
@kyleknapp19857 ай бұрын
Funny. Know what I see from paramedics? Know it alls. Who really don’t know half of what I do. Oh yeah. I’m a lazy nurse.
@nancydoig91797 ай бұрын
You let South African medical staff down. How evil are you.
@MiguelMolina-ks8xp4 ай бұрын
Shes Racist
@2ndHandBoyfriend3 ай бұрын
I just thought to myself, that her accent sounds hella familiar 🤔
@hydraxc24787 ай бұрын
My grandma was on her death bed a few years ago. There were five of us to visit her. 3 of them went to eat lunch. My father and I stayed. The nurse at one point turned off her oxygen and stared at my grandma. After a few seconds, my father told her to turn the oxygen back on, since she can't breathe now. The nurse said "I was trying something". And she left after turning it back on. To this day, I believe she is a sociopath. And it terrifies me that Ill be in the care of someone like that one day.
@zuluzeit71916 ай бұрын
I had multiple similar experiences when my mother was dying in February. The story is too long to tell properly in a comment but I feel you. There was a distinct impression that dying people aren't people anymore to a couple of the nurses there. I hope I go suddenly, instead of being begrudgingly cattle farmed.
@thecultofjohnnydelr.soulsw70106 ай бұрын
Exactly
@reubenvries88075 ай бұрын
Oh my God, this is so scary. Did you report it?
@vocalzbyjamelle62415 ай бұрын
Omg I’m so sorry that is crazy as hell
@meklity21505 ай бұрын
I 100% understand your concern but nurses sometimes do this to determine how the patient can perform without oxygen (to check the status) that way they can decrease the flow or even take the patient off oxygen depending on the reading they get and the patient’s physical condition when the oxygen is off
@GiftedGaz787 ай бұрын
The lack of charges is absolutely discussing, how can this go unpunished. The judge is worse than her in my opinion
@whodeycinbengals7 ай бұрын
This is a prime example of how it is in jail. You get ignored like this at every facility.
@christopherdunn30947 ай бұрын
Every single inmate is constantly lying and exagerrating. If you want good medical care, keep ya a$$ out of jail.
@BlizzardofOze7 ай бұрын
@@christopherdunn3094 Every single commenter on the internet is full of it and ignorant on any subject. If you want to know anything, figure it out. Don't trust the word of randos. Except me.
@christopherdunn30947 ай бұрын
@@BlizzardofOze Dummy, I've been to prison. I certainly didn't whine about the quality of the medical care I was receiving. I was a lowlife criminal who deserved every bit if it.
@olivieri23007 ай бұрын
@@BlizzardofOzemy good friend is a prison guard, my uncle works in a prison, hes kind of a teacher for them, and my girlfriend's mother is a nurse in jail. Inmates make up a lot of injuries. Most of them include the "i cant breathe" words. You cannot believe everything they say. She couldve done more, obviously, because he died, but if no one lied about those things that guy wouldve lived. He died because everyone make up that kind of stuff. Theres a story where I come from, I dont know if it translates to the same in english but its the little boy who screamed for wolves. He screamed for wolves when there were none, for fun. When there was really wolves, he screamed and everybody ignored him because he always lies. And he dies. Is it the fault of people that didnt help ? Or his own fault ?
@Emmy-z7d7 ай бұрын
@@olivieri2300nobody should be denied medical care. If they want to work at the jail then their job would be to take vitals of every person that says they can't breathe. If that's not what they want to do they need to work somewhere else. Their job is to make sure people don't die from lack of medical care.... not make unjustified decisions about who can and cannot breathe with no medical assessment.
@christinesimpson65297 ай бұрын
This is MURDER and they are ALL guilty and should be charged but the nurse in particular
@TheDuckAndRogerTheHorse7 ай бұрын
Fcuk me! I can't believe they let Nurse Ratchet go back to work! UN-believable.
@junglekutz56257 ай бұрын
To be honest, just because she's allowed to return to work, doesn't mean that what she did, up and goes away.
@jaywalker43547 ай бұрын
If true, everyone who has let the woman remain a nurse also belongs in prison, or at the very least, removed from their line of work in all 50 States.
@lisafoos89767 ай бұрын
what???
@jaywalker43547 ай бұрын
@@lisafoos8976, the nurse isn't the only guilty A-hole. The people who protected her are also the problem and should be punished. And if I were in charge, they would be punished. You are what you espouse.
@lisafoos89766 ай бұрын
@@jaywalker4354 Wow. I am surprised there wasn't more punishment.
@altamontdarby28197 ай бұрын
Birds of a feather flock together! Absolute filth! It must've been Visser's upbringing!😡🤢🤮 Every real human would forfeit their job to save someone's life! Condolences to the family.R.I.P.!🙏🏾
@NotTheNorm847 ай бұрын
The worst part is , she kept her nurse license after all of this …. Smh 🤦♀️😒
@JillyMae897 ай бұрын
Her entire defense was "nobody told me that"...?? Did she consider, oh I don't know, checking herself??
@giftedandbroke7 ай бұрын
Just signed the petition, hope it gets loads more signatures. Shocking that the nurse is still allowed to practice when she is responsible for his death. Racism seems the only likely reason unfortunately.
@RockandrollNegro7 ай бұрын
The only reason you're hearing about this is because of the man's skin color. This happens to white inmates every day, but nobody seems to care.
@hodathunkit85726 ай бұрын
Visser sounds south african
@nkelem28986 ай бұрын
Ek stem
@vocalzbyjamelle62415 ай бұрын
Where is the petition?
@danarzechula37695 ай бұрын
Oh no. She's what's called a lazy turd. I'm pretty sure she's equally lazy and incompetent for all patients.
@chudleyflusher71326 ай бұрын
They feel that’s it’s better to ignore a possibly dying inmate than to attend to someone who’s possibly faking it.
@shivalishankersharma15627 ай бұрын
This is infuriating ! He suffered excruciating pain for 9 hours and died stripped of his dignity, alone without any comfort. This reminds me of the case of the elderly lady who died right at the hospital front door because they said she was “faking it” . People who are trained to recognise distress signs ignore them to the point of death while continuosly do procedures on kids who are otherwise healthy (the many manchausen by proxy cases where medical professionals failed the victim) seeing the footage of that inmate just being thrown on the ground is something I will never forget
@catlady74647 ай бұрын
As a retired nurse of 45 years, I am appalled and sickened by her lack of concern and empathy.
@crispycritter70227 ай бұрын
It is common for medical people at jails and prison to make inmates uncomfortable as they can. A friend of mine had a spinal tap in jail and all they gave him was Tylenol. Also, they were very rough on him during the spinal tap. I'm amazed there's not more malpractice videos from department of corrections. Imagine how many cover-ups been done to protect jail staff.
@keeper64587 ай бұрын
Omg. Ive had 7 spinal taps and I cannot imagine what he went through. Thats an absolute disgrace
@junglekutz56257 ай бұрын
If it's common, that means that folk adapt to exercising whatever is considered a norm. If you're that stupid, good luck (whether or not the prisoner deserves poor treatment) .....with whatever abuse finds its way into their personal life. As going to work to consciously do the likes, confirms that you're interesting.
@tredjesongen7 ай бұрын
Same in hospitals. Only the worst seems to bother work in medical field. Definitive not there for the patients. Worse every year. Better stay healthy and keep a c capsule on your necklace. Health care has became hell care.
@gtgodbear63207 ай бұрын
One of my biggest fears is going to jail because I have gastroparesis and it looks very similar to withdrawal. Always sick for no apparent reason. I can barely survive at home and in a well controled environment. I have to have a very specific foods to beat the sickness if i even can. It causes torturous pain. I know they would treat me like a withdrawing drug addict. I'm already malnourished so after a few days I would probably die of starvation.
@renee19617 ай бұрын
She got away with it???? Oh, my God!! She should have been Charged!!
@blakeb99647 ай бұрын
Yep. If the victim was a cop or corrections officer tho, I bet she would've been
@tizzle41007 ай бұрын
THEY ARE ALL RESPONSIBLE AND NEEDS TO GO TO JAIL
@melanieconzachi66437 ай бұрын
The hardest part of watching this interview is how she acts as if it’s just nothing that this man died on her watch. Psychopath!
@juliancampelll7 ай бұрын
It’s not just the nurse, it’s the whole culture. You don’t sign up to work for the police because you enjoy helping unruly people. You join because you lack control over them
@Unhyphenated7 ай бұрын
What's so infuriating about this case and so many across the country is that jails are not required to acknowledge that withdrawals can be, and are often, freakin deadly. 🤬🤬🤬
@CoachJohnMcGuirk7 ай бұрын
It had nothing to do with withdrawals though, it was a stomach ulcer.
@kaydotz7 ай бұрын
@@CoachJohnMcGuirk They're not saying this was from withdrawals, they're saying that the nurse's assertion that he was just having withdrawals was no excuse for not providing aid. If it had been withdrawals that bad, he should have been taken to the hospital.
@kaydotz7 ай бұрын
@@CoachJohnMcGuirk That's not what Pamela is saying
@stoneysdead6897 ай бұрын
This man had a serious ulcer in his stomach- that's why his withdrawals were deadly- because he had a serious condition which was really aggravated by his withdrawal. I've worked in rehab for over 15 years and was an addict myself for over 20 yrs- and what you're saying is just not true. There are 2 addictions I know of that have withdrawals that are potentially deadly- alcohol and benzodiazepines. Otherwise known as booze and nerve pills, like Xanax or Valium. The most common things ppl are withdrawing from in prison are opiates and meth- neither one of which is typically deadly- unless the symptoms fail to be treated. Like if you don't treat the diarrhea and you dehydrate- you didn't die from withdrawal, you died from dehydration. That said- you can count the number of ppl who have died from opiate withdrawals on one hand- it's extremely rare.
@pofuno7 ай бұрын
Don’t be weak and get addicted to drugs simple as
@Jeff_11B6 ай бұрын
Analeen gets an "F", for failing to monitor her patient's vital signs, displaying an apathetic disregard for his safety, not reviewing patient records, and not following SOP. I cannot assign a grade to Mr. Wingo, as he was unfortunately a victim in this situation who lost his life because he was too "disruptive" to be cared for.
@sharonsocoloski54857 ай бұрын
That "charge nurse" doesn't deserve to have her license! Inexcusable!!!!!
@goodnightmunchie7 ай бұрын
She's probably celebrating transgender day today with her family 🫤🚬
@rosalynjeffery95107 ай бұрын
@@goodnightmunchieI'm going to keep you in prayer. You seen off today. Is everything ok with you?!?
@xyias39847 ай бұрын
@rosalynjeffery9510 you seem like you would enforce sex onto children. I hope someone calls cps God bless 🙌
@kagetoku82707 ай бұрын
Evil nurse evil prison
@princesabonita797 ай бұрын
i've been a jail nurse for over 10 years and people "faking" stuff is very common, even going as far as causing injury to be able to go to the hospital because they seem to think that they're gonna get released. We just had a dummy jump off the second tier on purpose, they went to the hospital but is still coming back to us after surgery. This is why assessing everyone regardless of "fakeness" is important. Worse come to worse you send the person to the hospital so they can confirm there's nothing wrong with them and if there is, they get admitted. This lady was completely in the wrong.
@bambilackner7 ай бұрын
It’s not that we think we’ll be released it’s just a way to see other stuff besides the walls of the jail, it’s an escape to the real world for awhile. No inmate thinks they’ll be released even if very sick, we know we still have to stay in the hospital with a guard. I’ve only seen one person actually released who was sentenced to time, and that was a female who was in pain from pregnancy, they called the judge and the judge signed the order for her to be released, she didn’t even go into labor, but bc she was close to her due date they let her go, she left the hospital that same night, didn’t have the baby until 2 months later. But there was some shady shit going on bc her mother worked In probation and was good friends with the local judges and police.
@zoedunn21407 ай бұрын
Exactly.. even if he just wanted to go to the hospital it’s your job to send him there tf she’s trifling asf
@princesabonita797 ай бұрын
@@zoedunn2140 not necessarily, we cant send people to the hospital just because someone wants to go. We need a legit reason and a dr's order. If after an assessment things are not sitting right, off they go but if we dont find anything or if signs/symptoms dont line up with the complain during an assessment they stay. This is where she went wrong, she DIDNT DO an assessment.
@zoedunn21407 ай бұрын
Theme she being contradictory because she’s saying she didn’t check his vitals because she didn’t want to go near him because he was being disruptive but then says they only do it twice a day ..
@princesabonita797 ай бұрын
@@zoedunn2140 yeah she contradicted herself
@CindyM3727 ай бұрын
What a travesty of justice, that nurse is disgusting!!!!
@freewithnature7 ай бұрын
What was she ever in charge of? Shame on that board for allowing her to continue hurting people. Absolute filth.
@peterlogan12646 ай бұрын
As a RN I find this nurse totally and utterly incompetent. The difference between withdrawing from drugs is so different to a person with pain. How can she nurse anyone without investigating the patient as your guideline for care for that shift. Shame on her and her team
@marisaJ17 ай бұрын
So the charge nurse thinks that she's so skilled that she can check someone's vitals by observing someone through a glass door. Or maybe she's psychic. She's definitely in the wrong job. If, as a nurse, you can't he bothered to do your job properly, quit.
@junglekutz56257 ай бұрын
Her position and title got to.her head. You can see it in her body language and how she's trying to con-vince the detectives that what they saw, wasn't what really happened. She should be ashamed of her behavior. But nah, her ego drives her to go full throttle with madmen tendencies.
@thecultofjohnnydelr.soulsw70106 ай бұрын
Women
@watsonspuzzle6 ай бұрын
Crying out in pain and begging for medical attention is being disruptive to some people.
@msveee45537 ай бұрын
NOBODY CARED ENOUGH to check his vitals! How must Kevil have felt, being ignored and reprimanded by MEDICAL STAFF whilst he was trying to let them know something was seriously wrong. Absolutely disgusting that she was not charged, unbelievable that she is still allowed to practice!!!! Beyond heartbreaking,. I was unaware of this case, thank you for making more people aware.
@danarzechula37695 ай бұрын
Judges don't hold them accountable. Blame the judges.
@Dixon_Cider4077 ай бұрын
It’s really sad how much corrections officers and staff care very little or at all about inmates
@Zach_Beebe7 ай бұрын
It looks bad for the officers but remember that they were poisoned by a head nurse that told them he was faking and not to worry. Still, someone should've advocated more forcefully for this poor man.
@goodnightmunchie7 ай бұрын
Don't forget my friend it's happy transgender day today 🤨🚬
@LandonBell117 ай бұрын
You think the medical staff (or the guards, for that matter) got that job because of their skill level? Typically, they are only slightly more useful to society than the people they get to abuse.
@BlueGiraffes017 ай бұрын
Exactly! If you don’t care about people, don’t work with people! It’s like the child abusers that decide to run a daycare.
@Ybw4207 ай бұрын
@@goodnightmunchie find a hobby you goblin
@terrell079816 ай бұрын
I've had a perforated ulcer before and it almost killed me. I know the pain this guy was in and it's unbearable. I went to the hospital and they gave me a shot of toridol because I had a kidney stone too. I told them that it didn't help at all and they sent me home. When I walked in the door my dad looked at me and said I looked like a ghost. Hours later my brother carried me to his truck and back to the hospital where I threw up blood everywhere. 4 hours later I was in emergency exploratory surgery.
@Cryptosick6 ай бұрын
Had Pancreatitis. Pain is almost 10/10 already. There is no way so many observers will consent him faking it. This, in my eyes, was Negligent homicide.
@ItzMythOfficial7 ай бұрын
how can people who swear to save lives even have the thought to end them
@owlflame7 ай бұрын
They can't really monitor your thoughts in hospitals. The technology isn't there yet.
@goodnightmunchie7 ай бұрын
Happy transgender day to you and your loved ones 😊🚬
@chain8720057 ай бұрын
@@S-K-log-W Newflash, every country is a joke because they all have humans.
@milesdyson52117 ай бұрын
Because you get POS like her who think because she works in a Jail is above the Law and treats everyone like she's above them. Personally, if it were my family member, Id serve the Vigil Ante Justice that she deserves.
@jmfewwfvhu7 ай бұрын
@@goodnightmunchieoh my gawwwwwd😂😂😂😂😂
@lindahossler55397 ай бұрын
As a retired RN, I can tell you without a doubt, you can check vitals at any time, not just when they are ordered. This is medical neglect condoned by the investigators.
@renee19617 ай бұрын
What this poor man went through is Appalling! He was in Agony!
@jmo21047 ай бұрын
They all murdered him, not just that nurse
@BlueGiraffes017 ай бұрын
How can someone that’s supposed to be dedicated to helping people be so callous and uncaring?? She is evil!
@TheOnlyTexasNinja7 ай бұрын
She is german. Its in her blood
@lunkis32336 ай бұрын
People don't forget to sign the petition. Annaleen Visser killed Kevil Wingo! She needs to be held accountable!
@valerieabney79667 ай бұрын
That nurse should be charged, ABSOLUTELY!!!!
@Emmy-z7d7 ай бұрын
you don't even get drugs for detoxing in the emergency room... he knows that if he's an addict. If a person comes to the ER saying they are detoxing from drugs they ARE NOT drug seeking.
@JohnC-r8y7 ай бұрын
Oh my , I am a recovering addict 5 years on methadone my Life feels brand new . I constantly get stigmatized, at the point where I don’t tell people my past . I can’t help but notice how addicts are still stigmatized , he just detoxing he’s fine …. What a living hell x5 for that poor man .
@GiftedGaz787 ай бұрын
How would she react if it was her son or family member? Most nurses and doctors go into this field of work because they care about people.
This is disgusting behavior for a nurse or any fellow human being watching & listening to someone dying in pain!!!
@christoph15967 ай бұрын
The fact that she was allowed to continue practicing nursing after this is disgraceful
@vocalzbyjamelle62415 ай бұрын
She’s still working?????? Omggggg unbelievable
@billyjomccalister56996 ай бұрын
It's common practice in any medical facility to check vitals on all new incoming patients. This is pure negligence!!!
@allenorganist20117 ай бұрын
She should be charged along with anyone supposedly (checking up on this man by just scanning a badge) if anyone checking every 15 mins, he may have been saved. This is wrong. A man died, everyone involved should be held accountable.
@EllaM4666 ай бұрын
She had officers there to assist while she do vitals. So she just wasn’t doing her job and should be stripped of her nursing license and arrested for negligence.
@davedauria47827 ай бұрын
damn, if that dude was my family she would be meeting her own "unfortunate" untimely demise.
@MamaTriedSolo6 ай бұрын
Y'all should know...how painful a perforated ulcer hurts....its literally stomach acid leaking....burning everything in its path...
@JAY18927 ай бұрын
6:51 He didn’t ‘demand’ help, he begged for it.
@MackieJackCreations6 ай бұрын
Nurse here, 35 years, and this nurse should have lost her license! BUT she is not the only one out there who just goes to work to collect a paycheck. Unfortunately, this crap happens everywhere, and it’s pathetic! We also took an oath to SERVE and PROTECT, and it is not our job to judge a person. We are supposed to be there to CARE for them!
@thegrimlooper7 ай бұрын
I remember losing my first patient at the Nursing home I worked at. This lady was so tiny but boy oh boy was she strong. On her bad days, it took multiple staff to get her safely in her bed. However, we could manage to deescalate the situation if we could get to her fast enough before the sun downers kicks in. My point is if we can figure out how to calm down people who are not in this realm, then why can’t the police just decide they are out of their own realm? If he was a problem, then calling an ambulance would actually be beneficial as the “problem” is gone, right? No one deserves to die because of their actions *when they are afraid and feel like they are dying* 😢
@mr.nobody23836 ай бұрын
“He just wants to go to the hospital”AND?? FKN TAKE HIM! He got arrested so he has no rights? INNOCENT UNTIL PROVEN GUILTY!! And at what point do you lose all your human compassion for others? He was clearly SUFFERING!!?
@user605211237 ай бұрын
How is the inmate waning to go to the hospital an excuse not to take him? Of course he wants to go to the hospital-he’s dying! Where would they expect a dying person , in pain, to want to go?
@jthomas27287 ай бұрын
What hope is there when this kind of thing goes completely unpunished both criminally and professionally-these people had zero interest in protecting the inmates-surely there must be a massive civil liability against Cobb County because all the wrongdoing is caught in your video.
@IcarusLhooq-bc7uq7 ай бұрын
She assumend he was detoxing. Without assessing him even . Disgraceful. She going to jail .
@ellaveserolle70825 ай бұрын
As a health care giver , there are intense negligence being displayed. Total disgrace to scientity of the nursing profession. I have to wonder how she acquired to role of charge nurse, as she did not display any critical thinking skills in her inadequate nursing judgements. May God have mercy on the family of this man.
@sdtlawton7 ай бұрын
I’ve been a nurse for 45 years…I am appalled by the suffering that poor man went through without even a set of vital signs or just a mere touch of his skin as part of a rapid assessment. I’m embarrassed this woman is a part of my profession.
@arcrides68417 ай бұрын
I had the same condition as this man and was screaming in pain and the first nurse I saw said I was acting in an attempt to get treated early so she made me wait while cramped up on a plastic chair for hours barely able to breathe. This was at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital here in Adelaide. To say it was the most horrible experience of my life is beyond an understatement.
@sdtlawton7 ай бұрын
@@arcrides6841 I am so sorry for your experience. Too many ppl go into nursing because it’s semi-decent pay. But there is an actual calling that is required to glorify God while serving. I cannot watch/listen to someone in agony and not do anything. The Charge Nurse is not the only voice on the floor. Every nurse is guided by their instincts and compassion. The Charge Nurse just keeps things “in order”. She doesn’t get to call the shots on who gets treatment and who doesn’t. We are taught vital signs as one of our first skills in nursing school because it’s the most accurate and immediate form of assessment there is. But if you don’t do them, ppl can die. Well, not on my watch. Again, I apologize to you for your pain and suffering.
@thecultofjohnnydelr.soulsw70106 ай бұрын
45 years 😂 no other profession works women into the system like that for so long
@tonysan47627 ай бұрын
Man they are all guilty. If the guy was crying out in pain and the nurse isnt doing anything then why didnt they press the nurse. They all just ignored him. Sure they covered their asses by passing the buck.
@NoNsEnSiCaLmEe7 ай бұрын
This story was infuriating! They sat there and blindly followed the charge nurses orders despite knowing better is sad. Why they weren't held accountable is even more upsetting!! I hate our legal system so much sometimes!!!
@ElieGroff3 ай бұрын
Penial discharge is a sign of an ulcer?! Whoever told you that is a quack. I've been an RN for over 25 years and that's BS.
@susie13707 ай бұрын
This is so disturbing! Too many people die in jails and prisons because of neglect ! They treat people as if they're nothing! This is the reason why these so called nurses etc get jobs at jail and prison facilities, because they can't get one at outside medical facilities! They're inept and just plain mean and don't care!
@PHlophe6 ай бұрын
Susie, nothing is worse than being dependant of someone for help that thinks you are disposable trash. and this applies to Retirement home and hospices as well. I was a janitor at a Retirement home and vowed to never send my parents there . between adult kids who rarely visit the parents and Nurses that detest them overtime . Lots of colluding and conniving bad actors in one place.
@y2ksurvivor7 ай бұрын
The justification that withdrawal = allowed to suffer is abhorrent. It's a potentially deadly medical event, not a moral punishment.
@Stellalujan147 ай бұрын
Makes me so sick !!!!!! I feel really bad for him! I have been in pain like that ! So has my son ! This man needs justice !
@GB-gn2iw5 ай бұрын
That poor man. It is absolutely disgraceful that he was treated so poorly. She has no compassion whatsoever. God bless him.
@renee19617 ай бұрын
Good morning, and Thank You for sharing this! I'll never understand how people Trusted to Care for others can harm them! Or stop caring about people!
@RodneyBray-p7p6 ай бұрын
I used to be a radiologic technologist in a cath lab. I took a contract in a New Mexico town with a high incident of mental disorders. When we didn't have coronary cases, I was asked three different times to watch "observation" patients which was not only just watching, but logging their observed condition every 15 minutes. The first one was in an isolation cell and was at first asleep, but when she woke up she was extremely animated and wanted to be let out. She was threating to sue me for ignoring her. This was in a similar physical position as the video above, as I was directly next to the nurse's station because this was a standard ED and so the isolation cell was not really isolated but centrally located. After less than an hour, I refused to stay because I felt it was out of my scope of practice and I was very uncomfortable when the staff ignored my questions about addressing her threats or possible concerns. The second time, it was a suicidal patient on a floor. She slept the whole time, was restrained and was being monitored (EKG, BP, O2 sat) so I was very comfortable observing and logging while watching television. She never moved or said a word as she was sedated. I can't recall the details of the other time. These situations are very odd. It's 100% fair to assume he's in detox, but even detox can cause vital distress. For any healthcare practitioner, especially a nurse, to ignore suffering without doing basic vital checks to the point the patient expires is unthinkable. These situations are part of the reason healthcare is so expensive, both because every patient needs quite a lot of actual care, but also the price of messing up is so high. Not to take their side, but the secretary, staff nurses and deputies had handled all of these kinds of interactions the same way many times before, I'm quite sure. Because if you started giving personalized care to every inmate that knew how to say the right things, you'd be chasing your tail all the time. Again, it costs a lot of money to have more man power. In this case, the poor guy was obviously ignored way too long and someone should have finally checked him before it was too late. A boiling kettle will scream.