This study systematically analyzed cases in South Korea wherein nurses were prosecuted for involuntary manslaughter or injury due to professional negligence in pediatric care.
We analyzed the precedents using the methodology of Hall and Wright (2008) and Austin (2010). Of the 618 cases retrieved from the Supreme Court Decisions Retrieval System in South Korea, we selected the 12 cases in which children were the victims and nurses were the defendants, using a case screening methodology.
The most frequent penalty was a fine, and newborns were the most frequent victims. The distribution of cases according to Austin's violation categories was: improper administration of medications (n=5), failure to monitor for and report deterioration (n=4), ineffective communication (n=4), failure to delegate responsibly (n=4), failure to know and follow facility policies and procedures (n=1), and improper use of equipment (n=1).
To ensure the safety of children, nurses are required to teach and practice a high standard of care. Nursing education programs must improve nurses’ awareness of their legal obligations. Nursing organizations and leaders should also work towards enacting effective nursing laws and ensuring that nurses are aware of their legal rights and responsibilities.
The expanding trend of specialization in the healthcare environment is causing a process of segmentation, triggering shifts in nurses’ roles and making nursing complex more complex and diversified [
Nurses are held legally liable in cases of nursing-related accidents that cause harm to a patient. This may be in the form of criminal liability (leading to criminal punishment), civil liability (leading to compensation for damages), and/or administrative liability (leading to suspension of a license or work suspension)[
Nursing care is required by vulnerable groups such as the elderly and children. In Korea, the elderly population is increasing and the population share of children is decreasing, with the number of children under the age of 14 drastically decreasing from 9.9 million in 2000 to 6.3 million in 2020 [
The most common illegal act in nursing practice is negligence. Nursing education must strengthen legal awareness and help to prevent legal negligence by developing programs that present legal cases and other relevant statistics of clinical practice [
In this study, we sought to analyze the case law of involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury by nurses caring for children, examine the court rulings, and review the context and types of nursing practice. The results of this study can be used as basic data for creating standards to prevent nursing errors in pediatric care.
This systematic content analysis study was conducted with the objectives of 1) systematically collecting cases of involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence by nurses, in which children were the victims, to understand the related situation and characteristics, 2) identifying the circumstances of the violations of legal nursing duties, and 3) determining the characteristics of involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence by pediatric nurses.
A literature review was performed to systematically analyze the contents of criminal cases of involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence in which children were the victims and nurses were the suspects. We used the inductive content analysis method proposed by Hall and Wright [
The study cases included the rulings of district courts, high courts, and the Supreme Court on criminal trial cases of involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professionally negligent pediatric nursing care that were adjudicated from 2000 to 2020. For the case search, we used the Supreme Court General Law Information Portal (online system), Supreme Court Decisions Retrieval System (online system), LAWnB (online system and paid service), and Case Notes (online system and free service), using the keywords.
The data collection period was from August 1, 2020, to August 30, 2020. Using the keywords “nurse”, “involuntary manslaughter”, “professional negligence leading to death”, “professional negligence leading to injury”, “criminal case”, “newborns”, and “children and adolescents”, we retrieved 29 cases from the Supreme Court General Law Information Portal, 497 cases from the Supreme Court Decisions Retrieval System, 62 cases from LAWnB, and 30 cases from Case Notes. We requested permission from each court to access the case records and received files with anonymized court rulings by email. After removing duplicates (n=73) and records with no original case reports (n=121), 424 cases were reviewed. Next, 357 cases in which the defendants were not nurses and 55 cases in which the victims were not children were excluded. Twelve cases remained that involved involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence by pediatric nurses.
To identify the characteristics of the court rulings on involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence by pediatric nurses, we extracted information on case number, the type of violation according to Austin’s classification, charge, disposition, a brief summary, Tatbestand for nursing negligence (breach of duty of care, outcome, causation), illegality, liability, and foreseeability into an Excel spreadsheet. Additionally, we classified the nursing activities eligible for legal protection into seven categories as proposed in Austin’s standard classification [
Next, we focused on the requirements for the crime of involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence; that is, the constituent elements of the crime (hereinafter the “Tatbestand”) consisting of 1) illegal activities (breach of duty of care), 2) its harmful outcome (outcome), and 3) the causal connection (causation) between the first two elements. Tatbestand is a German word adopted in English and widely used in legal contexts. Article 14 of the Criminal Act defines “negligence” as an “act performed through ignorance of the facts which comprise the constituents of a crime by the neglect of normal attention” [
This study was conducted after receiving approval from the Institutional Review Board (IRB) of Gangneung-Wonju National University located in Wonju, Korea (No. GWNUIRB2021-38). The court rulings, which are the subjects of this study, are all documents open to the public. All documents were anonymized by the court, which precluded the collection of personal information. Accordingly, with a minimal risk level (level I), this study was exempted from the requirement to obtain consent from the subjects.
The 12 court rulings consisted of 10 district court decisions, 1 high court decision, and 1 Supreme Court decision. The highest frequency of incidents was found from 2005 to 2009 (n=7, 58.5%). Nurses were the sole defendants in six cases (50.0%) and doctors were accomplices in six cases (50.0%). Seven cases (58.3%) involved the crime of involuntary manslaughter (two cases were excluded as the high court and Supreme Court also ruled on the same cases) and five cases (41.7%) of professional negligence resulting in injury. The most frequent penalty imposed on nurses was a fine (n=8, 58.3%), and newborns were the most frequent victims (n=7, 58.3%) (
For involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence to meet the requirements for a crime, the act of nursing negligence should satisfy the Tatbestand for a crime of negligence and be accompanied by illegality and liability. We classified the nursing activities eligible for legal protection into seven categories as proposed by Austin’s standard classification of legal tips for nursing practice [
Administering injections is a typical activity delegated to nurses and is a medical task within the scope of their clinical practice, whereas diagnosis and treatment are the tasks of doctors. Doctors prescribe the injection, but nurses perform the rest of the injection process, from preparing the injection agent to administering the injection itself. In principle, this can be interpreted as meaning that the work is to be done by a doctor, but a nurse can do it when required by the situation [
In Case 3, a pediatric nurse had the professional duty of care to inject the prescribed antibiotic only after confirming that the patient showed no reaction to the antibiotic skin test. Nevertheless, the nurse did not pay attention to the information transmitted to her that the skin test result for the antibiotic (cefotaxime) was positive and administered an intravenous (IV) injection, causing anaphylactic shock that led to the death of a 2-year-old boy who had been hospitalized with laryngitis. In Case 5, a nurse working in the pediatric department was using scissors to remove a band-aid attached to the infusion needle on the right hand of a 6-month-old infant hospitalized with a high fever. The nurse had the professional duty of care to take measures to prevent injuries from the scissor blade, even if the victim moved his hand when freed from the band-aid, by making sure that the blade of the scissors would not touch the hand. As a result of neglecting this duty, the nurse was convicted of involuntary manslaughter.
Case 9 involves a failure to provide follow-up observation after administering valium, a high-risk medication. The patient was transferred to a tertiary hospital for treatment, where he died. In Case 10, a 14-month-old girl with respiratory distress symptoms due to pneumonia and asthma died due to a failure to conduct proper testing and administer timely therapy such as mechanical ventilation, even though inhalation therapy and drug treatment with epinephrine/aminophylline were found to be ineffective. In this case, apart from the doctor’s inappropriate treatment approaches, the nurse was also prosecuted and convicted for a breach of duty of care by not observing and reporting on the patient with respiratory distress.
Nursing behaviors classified as errors in medication administration were primarily cases in which the correct administration method was not followed or side effects related to a specific drug were not identified. However, Case 5, in which an accident occurred when the needle was removed, was also categorized as a dosing error.
The second category of nursing error is a lack or delay in monitoring and reporting. A nurse’s duty of care to provide follow-up observation is regarded as an overlap of dependent and independent nursing activities. Dependent nursing activities are those that require a doctor’s instructions and supervision and the doctor’s instructions are an essential element of the work [
Cases 3 and 5 were also cases where quick monitoring and reporting were omitted. Case 7 involved involuntary manslaughter due to professional negligence. A neonatal room nurse, was taking care of 12 newborns entrusted to the postpartum care center and 6 newborns admitted to the obstetrics and gynecology department at the same time. A breach of the nurse’s duty of care resulted in the suffocation of one newborn due to airway obstruction because the nurse neglected to observe for vomiting after feeding or to check for other abnormalities.
In Case 8, a nurse working in a postpartum care center was fined 3,000,000 won (2,500 USD) for involuntary manslaughter leading to the death of a newborn from suffocation due to airway obstruction caused by inhaling vomit. The nurse had tried to stop the newborn (26 days old) from crying heavily by increasing the feeding interval to 20 minutes. The nurse should have known that close feeding intervals are likely to trigger regurgitation of the upper-layer substances in the stomach. The additional feeding, as well as the weak digestion of a newborn, increases the likelihood of vomiting, which may obstruct the airway and lead to suffocation. The nurse’s duty of care to take measures against incessant crying by finding out its cause while controlling the volume of feeding was neglected.
Nursing errors in reporting and monitoring generally involved cases where the time to report an emergency to the doctor was delayed. The emergency was either not recognized instantly or the emergency was perceived or confirmed but reporting was delayed, both situations leading to fatal outcomes for the patient. In addition, there were two neonatal room cases in which dangerous situations led to post-feeding suffocation, but the incidents were not immediately recognized or confirmed even after the death of the child.
The third type of nursing error is a lack of effective communication. Communication is a very important intervention in nursing care settings. Communication between medical teams, as well as communication with patients and caregivers, is important for effectively carrying out nursing activities [
In Case 1, a nurse in the NICU arbitrarily administered SMOFlipid twice without confirming the doctor’s unclear prescription. The head nurse working in the NICU was also liable for neglecting or condoning the dispensation of the liquid nutrient into multiple-use doses, as well as the delayed administration practice of the nurses. The head nurse did not provide proper education for the staff nurses on managing medication in a way that prevents infection, preparing injection agents, and on taking proper sanitation and infection measures. Education was also insufficient on properly reporting infection observation results transmitted from the infection management unit, or on preventing recurrence of medication errors.
In Case 3, proper shift-change communication did not take place. The nurse who took over received a note that the patient showed a positive skin reaction test to the antibiotic (cefotaxime), but she did not notice it, and this resulted in the anaphylactic shock and death of a 2-year-old child.
The nurse in Case 6 did not notice the report given by the caregiver and did not report it to the attending physician for 7 minutes, even though the nurse confirmed that the heart rate and oxygen saturation were abnormal. Due to this communication error, the patient did not receive emergency measures to secure the airway, which resulted in grade 1 encephalopathy.
In Case 10, the failure to communicate the ineffective inhalation therapy and drug treatments (epinephrine/aminophylline) and failure to suggest an alternative measure for airway maintenance can be considered an error of insufficient communication.
To meet patients’ needs, nurses with appropriate skills and abilities should be able to delegate work appropriately to a co-worker. Accurate judgment regarding the right person to perform the work, the right type of work, in the right environment, with the right direction and the right supervision, is important for performing safe nursing [
In Case 2, the newborn's bath or hygiene could have been delegated to a nursing assistant or caregiver, but the nurse, who had the authority to delegate, did not do so and caused a fracture by dropping the newborn.
The nurse in Case 6 did not delegate tasks or provide instructions to the child's mother in a situation where the nurse could not directly observe the child for vomiting or other symptoms after administering antipyretics. The nurses in Cases 9 and 10 did not provide appropriate instructions or supervision for parents and neglected to observe or respond quickly to the side effects and subsequent symptoms of dangerous drugs administered to their children in the emergency room.
The NICU nurse in Case 1 was responsible for accurate medication administration and medication management according to the hospital’s medication management guidelines. However, regarding the additional dose of SMOFlipid, she did not confirm the unclear prescription with the doctor and arbitrarily administered the injection twice. The nurse also dispensed this lipid nutrient into multiple-use doses in a room accessible by many hospital employees, not in an aseptic environment, and the injection was given by a nurse other than the nurse who prepared it. In addition, although the SMOFlipid was to be used for one person, it was dispensed into multiple-use doses, and the nurse, violating the instruction to use it immediately after opening it, left it at room temperature for more than 5 hours before administering it. As a result, the nurse was convicted of involuntary manslaughter.
In Case 4, to prevent accidents in advance, an obstetrics and gynecology nurse had the professional duty of care, as an assistant to a natural delivery procedure, to check all measures for the safety of the newborn before participating in the childbirth. She neglected this duty of care and inflicted second- and third-degree burns to a newborn on the left shoulder blade, trunk, and lower limbs for an unknown number of treatment days by laying the newborn on an electric hot pack placed in the newborn cradle. Although interventions to maintain a newborn’s body temperature are an important and urgent part of nursing practice, the nursing error in this case lay in the failure to use an electric device (hot pack) efficiently and safely.
This study presents the results of a systematic review of court cases adjudicated as involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence.
Over the past two decades in Korea, there have been 12 cases of involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence by pediatric nurses, of which 10 cases were first instance (district court) cases, and two cases were appealed (one at a high court and one at the Supreme Court). The highest frequency of incidents occurred from 2005 to 2009 (n=7, 58.5%). Nurses were the sole defendants in six cases (50.0%, excluding the two overlapping cases). Seven cases (58.3%) involved the crime of involuntary manslaughter (excluding the two overlapping cases). Involuntary manslaughter cases outnumbered at-fault injury cases. Newborns represented the highest proportion of the victims.
As the field of nursing expands, along with increasing segmentation among healthcare services, the number of tasks that involve risk also increases. The increased risk of medical accidents related to nursing activities is demonstrated by the increasing number of court cases holding nurses liable for negligence, along with cases in which nurses are sole defendants [
Involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence by pediatric nurses was recognized in all but one of 12 cases. In the analysis of medical malpractice civil litigations, in which children and adolescents were the victims, 94.9% of the defendants lost the case due to a breach of duty of care [
Classifying the 12 cases in the present study according to Austin’s standard classification of the seven types of error [
The second type of error is patient harm due to negligent monitoring and a delay in reporting. The duty of follow-up observation is an overlap of dependent and independent nursing activities and behaviors [
Communication errors comprise the third type of error. Obtaining information from children through interviews is challenging and it is difficult to secure data. What pediatric patients communicate should be considered taking into account their developmental stage [
The fourth area of nursing errors is the failure to delegate tasks efficiently. When caring for pediatric patients, the nurse most often delegates tasks to their caregivers. However, such delegation must also consider the “Five Rights:” right person, right task, right circumstances, right directions, and right supervision [
Cases of noncompliance with the policies and procedures of the affiliated institution were mainly associated with neglecting the duty to educate and supervise. In Case 1, for example, the infection control policy was not followed. Lastly, the failure to use a device appropriately was identified in the case in which improper handling of a hot pack caused severe burns to a newborn (Case 4).
In this study, we analyzed court rulings regarding involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence by pediatric nurses. A particularly salient feature of this study is classifying the cases into the seven types of nursing error according to Austin’s nursing practice standards [
It has been suggested that nursing associations in South Korea should also hire one or more lawyers to provide evidence and preventive education to minimize the legal problems of pediatric nurses. Cases of involuntary manslaughter or at-fault injury due to professional negligence by nurses caring for children were more frequently recognized as crimes than cases involving adults [
Although this study used only data from the legal documents of one country for data analysis, we tried to obtain as many precedents as possible by using as many sites as possible. However, due to institutional problems, some precedents could not be obtained. In addition, since data were classified according to the researchers' judgment for content analysis, there were possible limitations to the objectivity of the data.
Nursing errors in children were more often fatal and led to judgments of guilt in the courts than nursing errors in adults. To reduce these nursing errors, nurses need to commit to implementing relevant guidelines in their nursing practice and documenting their nursing activities in detail. In addition, legal awareness should be improved by educating nurses on their legal responsibilities. Nursing administrators should organize the regulations and guidelines related to each area of nursing work and respond sensitively to improve problems in each ward, including environmental and staffing concerns. We will continue to strive to establish a medical system that protects both patients and nurses by analyzing the precedents of cases in which pediatric nurses have been tried for negligence and by continuing education to increase the legal awareness of nurses.
Conceptualization: all authors; Data curation, Formal analysis: all authors; Writing-original draft, Writing-review and editing: all authors; Final approval of published version: all authors.
No existing or potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.
This study was supported by a National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korean government (No. 2021R1A2C1095530).
Please contact the corresponding author for data availability.
None.
Flowchart of selection for criminal cases.
Characteristics of the Cases in the Study (
Characteristics | Categories | n (%) |
---|---|---|
Year of incidents | 2000-2004 | 2 (16.6) |
2005-2009 | 7 (58.5) | |
2010-2014 | 1 (8.3) | |
2015-2019 | 2 (16.6) | |
Defendants | Nurse | 6 (50.0) |
Nurse and doctor | 6 (50.0) | |
Guilty | Involuntary manslaughter | 7 (58.3) |
At-fault injury | 5 (41.7) | |
Victim's age (year) | Newborn | 7 (58.3) |
0.5-1 | 1 (8.3) | |
2-5 | 3 (25.1) | |
6-13 | 1 (8.3) | |
Judgments | Innocent | 1 (8.3) |
Fine |
8 (66.7) | |
Suspended sentence | 1 (8.3) | |
Probation |
2 (16.7) |
Duplicate: the first trial and the second trial are different.
Content Analysis of the Cases in the Study (
Case number | Type of Austin category |
Charge/Disposition | Brief summary | Tatbestand for nursing negligence |
Illegality | Liability | Foreseeability (duty to foresee possible results) | Avoidability (duty to avoid possible results) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Breach of duty of care | Outcome | Causation | ||||||||
1 | a, c, f | Professional negligence resulting in death/Acquitted | Four premature infants died from sepsis caused by Citrobacter freundii infections in a NICU. | Negligence of not preparing SMOFlipid (lipid injectable emulsion) in an aseptic environment and not following the instruction to use immediately after opening; | Four newborns died of sepsis. | The negligence in the process of SMOF lipid injection preparation caused Citrobacter infections, which resulted in sepsis and death. This accusation was not supported by evidence of causality. | Doctors and nurses must take appropriate and sufficient infection control measures. | Doctors have the duty of care to prevent incidents by providing sufficient guidance and supervision to prevent nurses from committing mistakes while carrying out medical activities. | In dispensing SMOFlipid, its infection risk was foreseeable in newborns with very low birth weight and newborns in critical condition, given their incomplete defense system against microorganisms. | NICU Nursing Management Guidelines [ |
negligence of not following the work guideline that the one who has prepared the injection agent should administer it; | Medical personnel's duty of care in drug administration is to prevent harmful results to the patient before, during, and after the medication administration (long-term medication). | Enforcement decree of the Medical Service Act, Art. 39-34 [ |
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negligence of neglecting and condoning the practice of dispensing and delayed administration; | Nursing basics: Nurses must avoid medication errors by administering only medications prepared by themselves. | |||||||||
negligence of not conducting infection control and education for nurses as the head nurse. | ||||||||||
2 | d | Professional negligence resulting in injury/Fine 5,000,000 won (4,100 USD) | In the neonatal room, the infant was dropped on the floor from a height of 1 meter, resulting in parietal fractures. | Breach of the professional duty of care to avoid dropping the victim. | Newborn's unclear parietal bone fracture. | Factual causation was established. | Illegality was applicable due to neglecting the professional duty of care. | Newborns are vulnerable to shock, and they are fully entrusted to the nurse. | Newborns must be moved in a cradle and the fall should have been foreseen. | Duty to take precautions to avoid falls because newborns are a high-risk group and have no control over their bodies. |
3 | a, b, c | Professional negligence resulting in death/6-month jail term with 2 years on probation | A 2-year-old boy died of shock after an antibiotic injection was administered without paying attention to the fact that he had tested positive for the antibiotic skin reaction test. | Injection of antibiotics despite the confirmed antibiotics resistance and the instruction not to administer it, and breach of duty of care to properly treat the anaphylactic shock and record the incident. | Death from anaphylactic shock. | Shortness of breath and circulatory collapse immediately after the intravenous injection of antibiotics prescribed at 23:40. | The professional duty of care to administer antibiotics safely. | The professional duty of care is to conduct an antibiotic skin test and confirm no adverse reactions when administering antibiotics to the patient as per the doctor's prescription. | Death could be foreseen when administering antibiotics regardless of the confirmed antibiotic skin reaction. | In the case of a confirmed antibiotic skin reaction, the injection should not be administered and the doctor should be notified. |
4 | g | Professional negligence resulting in injury/Fine 1,500,000 won (1,230 USD) | In the delivery room, a newborn baby was laid on an electric hot pack placed on the cradle, resulting in second-and third-degree burns to the left shoulder blade, trunk, and lower limbs. | Breach of the professional duty of care to prevent an accident by participating in the delivery process after checking all measures for the safety of the newborn. | Deep burns in the left shoulder blade, trunk, and lower limbs from an electric hot pack. | No other possible causes of burns were found. | Violation of the duty of due diligence for safety measures. | In the delivery process, the nurse must take measures for the newborn's safety. | The risk of burns and damage could be foreseen, considering the fragile skin condition of newborns. | Burns could be avoided by keeping the temperature of the hot pack at a low level or by removing it for safe environmental management. |
5 | a, b | Professional negligence resulting in injury/Suspended sentence | In the pediatric ward, a 6-month-old infant suffered an amputation injury to the fifth finger of the right hand while removing the bandage with an intravenous fluid needle on the back of the hand. | Breach of the professional duty of care to ensure safe management of all measures related to medication administration. | Amputation injury to the fifth finger of the right hand. | The cut was made with the nurse's scissors. | Negligence for noncompliance with all medication-relat ed matters despite the need for safe management. | Obligation to ensure safe management for accurate medication administration taking into account possible situations of highly vulnerable patients. | It could be confirmed that the child could not stay still, and it could be foreseen that cutting the band-aid with scissors could cause injury. | This safety accident could be avoided by using safe scissors to remove the band-aid or by modifying the method of fixing the injection site. |
6 | c, d | Professional negligence resulting in injury/6-month jail term with 2 years on probation | A 16-month-old girl hospitalized for high fever in the waiting ward vomited antipyretic syrup and powdered milk, and showed cyanosis, tachycardia, and convulsions. She was left untreated to maintain breathing, and the report to the doctor was also delayed, resulting in grade 1 encephalopathy. | Breach of professional duty of care to take emergency measures to maintain the airway in case of cyanosis due to hypoxia, low oxygen saturation and heart rate, and difficulty with spontaneous breathing. | Grade 1 encephalopat hy. | Causation was established by the fact that change in consciousness occurred immediately after the cyanosis and tachycardia. | Negligence of noncompliance with emergency care in a situation requiring it. | Obligation to immediately report to the doctor upon confirming the patient's condition that required immediate airway maintenance. | Respiratory failure is a foreseeable result of decreased oxygen saturation and tachycardia as per the professional knowledge of the nurse. | When hypoxia occurred, the nurse should have secured the airway and provided oxygen using ventilation and airway maintenance devices. |
Negligence in failure to immediately notify the physician of the victim's symptoms and perform airway maintenance. | Negligence of delaying the time for airway maintenance by failing to notify of symptoms immediately. | Actions that require checking the condition of the emergency patient and performing emergency measures such as immediate airway maintenance and artificial respiration. | ||||||||
7 | b | Professional negligence resulting in death/Fine 3,000,000 won (2,500 USD) | The newborn died of suffocation due to the inability to respond immediately to situations such as vomiting after feedings in the neonatal room. | Breach of professional duty of care to guide and supervise nurses and provide human and material resources to prevent suffocation accidents while feeding. | Death (estimated) from airway obstruction and asphyxiation by vomit. | No record in the precedent. | Negligence of not providing human and material resources necessary for the proper care of newborns. | Liability for guiding and supervising nurses in addition to providing human and material resources. | The hospital director should have foreseen that it is difficult to safely manage 18 newborns with one nurse. | The incident could have been avoided with proper guidance and supervision of nurses in addition to the provision of human and material resource. |
Neglecting the duty by allocating at least two nurses on the night shift to take care of 18 newborns. | ||||||||||
8 | b | Professional negligence resulting in death/Fine 3,000,000 won (2,500 USD) | The newborn died of suffocation because the nurse could not immediately respond to situations such as vomiting after shortening the feeding interval in the neonatal room of the postpartum care center. | Breach of professional duty of care of neonatal nurses to prevent suffocation accidents by carefully and constantly monitoring the condition of newborns who vomit after feeding (holding them in the arms) and burping them and laying them down appropriately. | Death from suffocation due to short feeding intervals and failure to respond in a timely way to vomiting after feeding. | Proven causation of asphyxiation from lactation and vomiting. | Breach of duty of care to prevent incidents of feeding-related suffocation of newborns. | Breach of professional duty of care of neonatal nurses to prevent suffocation accidents by carefully and constantly monitoring the condition of newborns who vomit after feedings (holding them in the arms, burping them, and laying them down appropriately). | Nurses can foresee that when several newborns are fed concurrently or fed in a position other than held in the arms, newborns are likely to vomit, which can lead to suffocation. | Breach of professional duty of care of neonatal nurses to prevent suffocation accidents by carefully and constantly monitoring the condition of newborns who vomit after feeding (holding them in the arms, burping them, and laying them down appropriately). |
9 |
a, d | Professional negligence resulting in death/Fine 5,000,000 won (4,100 USD) | A 13-year-old boy admitted to the emergency room for fulminant hepatitis was not treated properly and his symptoms of loss of consciousness and shortness of breath were not immediately reported to the doctor. Moreover, no follow-up observation was made after administering valium. The patient was transferred to a tertiary hospital, where he died. | Breach of duty of care to closely monitor the progress of patients with unconfirmed diagnoses accompanied by abnormal blood test results and failure to report problems immediately. | Death by respiratory failure. | Although the outcome was possible, the nurse did not foresee it or take measures to avoid it. | Breach of duty of care to closely monitor the progress of patients with unconfirmed diagnoses accompanied by abnormal blood test results and failure to report problems immediately. | The act of closely observing the emergency patient's condition and promptly reporting any changes so that the patient receives timely and appropriate treatment. | A nurse equipped with professional knowledge must be able to foresee that decreased oxygen saturation and tachycardia would lead to respiratory failure. | A nurse equipped with professional knowledge knows that in the case of abnormal blood test results and low oxygen saturation, the condition can be prevented from worsening by immediately opening the airway and providing mechanical ventilation such as oxygen administration. |
Negligence by not closely observing for side effects after administration of a high-risk medication that could lead to respiratory failure. | ||||||||||
10 | a, c, d | Professional negligence resulting in death/Fine of 7,000,000 won (5,750 USD) | A 14-month-old girl who had respiratory distress symptoms due to pneumonia and asthma died due to a failure to conduct proper testing and administer a timely therapy such as mechanical ventilation, even though inhalation therapy and drug treatment with epinephrine/aminophyllin e were found ineffective. | Apart from the doctor's inappropriate treatment approaches, the nurse was also prosecuted and convicted for a breach of duty of care for not observing and reporting on the patient with respiratory distress. | Death due to failure to provide timely and proper treatment. | In a situation in which inhalation therapy and drug treatment with epinephrine/ aminophylline were found ineffective, the nurse failed to secure the airway by other means, which led to death of the patient. | Negligence in delaying the time for airway maintenance by not notifying of symptoms immediately. | Obligation to immediately report to the doctor upon confirming the patient has a condition that requires immediate airway maintenance. | Respiratory failure is a foreseeable result of decreased oxygen saturation and tachycardia as per the nurse's professional knowledge. | When hypoxia occurred, the nurse should have secured the airway and provided oxygen using ventilation and airway maintenance devices. |
a: administer medications properly, b: monitor for and report deterioration, c: communicate effectively, d: delegate responsibly, e: document in an accurate and timely manner, f: know and follow facility policies and procedures, g: use equipment properly;
Twelve cases were coded and analyzed, but only 10 cases were included in the content analysis because Case 9 included precedents from the first trial, the second trial, and the Supreme Court; NICU, neonatal intensive care unit; USD, United States dollar.