Saturday 23 November 2013

Car Accident Death Photos

Car Accident Death Photos

Source:- Google.com.pk

The widower of a nurse who died in a car accident after a grueling 12-hour shift is now suing her former hospital for allegedly 'working her to death'.
Jim Jasper's wife Beth died last March 16, after falling asleep behind the wheel while driving home after a night shift at The Jewish Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Mr Jasper is now suing the Mercy Health Group for causing her death, claiming that the stress of extra hours caused by under staffing led to the fatigue that caused her accident.
Beth was the mother of their two young children, a 6-year-old son and an 11-year-old daughter, who have been having a hard time dealing with her untimely passing.

'It's been rough on them, expecting mom to come home from work and she didn't come home from work,' he told WLWT.According to the lawsuit filed by the family's attorney Eric Deters, Beth's supervisor Mary Alliston 'expressed concern to her superiors' that Beth was being 'worked to heath'.

The day after Beth's accident, the hospital held a meeting for the nurses and the Hospital's Director of Nursing, Kathy Smith, said she 'was so sorry about the death of Beth' and 'sorry that they had dropped the ball'.

Nurses who worked with Beth during her shift leading up to the accident said she complained about being 'really stressed' and said she 'hadn't eaten' at all during the shift.

Before joining the Bone Marrow Transplant Unit at The Jewish Hospital in 2000, Beth worked at another Mercy Health hospital but left for better hours.

'Nurse-to-patient ratio, it was just not at safe levels, so she went to Jewish,' Mr Jasper said.

But soon after, the hospital was bought by her old employer and staffing went down again.

The Ohio Nursing Association said these nursing shortages are becoming a real problem.

'Shortages mean nurses are routinely stretched too thin because they are expected to work longer shifts and care for a larger number of patients. This path often leads to nurse fatigue and is dangerous practice that compromises the safety of both the nurses and the patients they service,' Gingy Harshey-Meade of the ONA said.

In court last Thursday, Mr Jasper said that something needs to change about nurse staffing.

'They're passionate about their work. They don't want to make a mistake, but when you're working under those conditions, it's going to happen,' he said.
A mother thrown to her death from a Six Flags rollercoaster in July was sitting in a car operators knew to be faulty and
wasn't properly restrained, according to a newly released police report.

Rosa Ayala-Gaona Esparza, 52, was ejected from her seat in the Texas Giant in front of her mortified daughter at about 6:40 p.m. July 19. Her partially severed body was found wrapped around a support beam on the roof of the Honky Tonk tunnel, with blood and tissue scattered over a 75-foot area.

According to The Houston Chronicle, the ride operator told Arlington Police Department investigators that he checked everyone's restraints before the train departed, but when it went by he remembered thinking the restraint wasn't all the way down on Esparza's thigh.


Car Accident Death Photos
 

 Car Accident Death Photos 

Car Accident Death Photos 

Car Accident Death Photos 

Car Accident Death Photos 

Car Accident Death Photos 

Car Accident Death Photos 

Car Accident Death Photos 

Car Accident Death Photos 

Car Accident Death Photos 

Car Accident Death Photos

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 






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