Nursing student was fired for refusing to lie about vaccines (case continues in court)
Nursing student was fired for refusing to lie about vaccines (case continues in court)
Nichole Rolfe, formerly Nichole Bruff, was a nursing student at Baker College in Michigan and dreamed of being a midwi nurse practitioner ...
Nichole Rolfe, formerly Nichole Bruff, was a nursing student at Baker College in Michigan, who dreamed of being a midwifery nurse practitioner before she was fired by the director of the nursing department shortly before graduation, after Rolfe interrogated the instructors who taught students to lie. the patient to force them to get vaccinated.UPDATE: According to August 1:
"A judge ordered Baker College to pay tuition for the nursing school of a Shiawassee County woman after she claimed that she was expelled from the university's nursing program for questioning the lessons she said encouraged students to lie to patients to vaccinate them.
Now, he wants an additional payment of $ 2 million for the nursing career he will never have.
On Tuesday, September 5, the Judge of the Circuit Court of Genesee County, Joseph J. Farah, passed a final judgment granting Nichole Rolfe approximately $ 15,000, the cost of nursing school enrollment, in one lawsuit against Baker College.Farah ruled that the extent of the damage caused to Rolfe, who was fired from the Baker campus in Owosso 20 weeks before he graduated, was equal to his education in nursing school.
However, attorney Philip L. Ellison, based in Hemlock, who represents Rolfe in the lawsuit, argues that the Shiawassee County woman must receive full payment for "the career she will never have" because she was expelled from the school.
"She deserves $ 2 million," said Ellison. "That's his loss of a lifetime for the race he'll never have because he was fired unfairly. (Baker) It's not that easy."
Ellison said he intends to appeal Farah's decision to the Michigan Court of Appeals in hopes of obtaining the multimillion-dollar prize for his client. If the appellate court reverses Farah's decision, the case would go to trial, Ellison said.
Ellison said that because of the sentence, which pays Rolfe $ 2,250 in advance and has $ 12,250 per court order, he can not fund assistance to another nursing program.
Rolfe, who currently works in the field of medicine at Michigan State University, finds himself in a difficult position after he has exhausted his federal loans to attend Baker College, who refuses to reimburse the full tuition of the former student. nursing, said Ellison, calling Rolfe "A tough woman".
There is no news that HNN is able to find, on whether or not Rolfe could return to court and sue for the loss of income. In case the information is available, we will update this story.
End of the update.
In April 2015, we report here in Health Impact News that nursing student Nichole Rolfe, formerly Nichole Bruff, was fired from her nursing program shortly before graduation after she allegedly refused to commit fraud by lying to patients to force them to comply with immunizations, such as His instructors indicated it.
Nichole defended herself with a lawsuit against Baker College.
Baker College requested that the case be dismissed, but Judge Joseph Farah rejected the motion, and Nichole's case will now be heard before a jury in Genesee County. His case was set for trial in the summer of 2016. Nichole's attorney, Philip L. Ellison, issued the following Press Release.
PRESS RELEASE: THE JUDGE DENIES THE BAKER COLLEGE DEPARTURE APPLICATION IN THE CASE OF VACCINE
Flint, MI - The Genesee County Circuit Court rejected Baker College's request to dismiss or restrict the lawsuit filed by a former nursing student who claims he was wrongly dismissed from the nursing program on the Baker campus in Owosso because of discussions about vaccines.
Nursing students instructed to lie to patients in order to get vaccinated
Nichole Rolfe is suing Baker College after she was dismissed from the school's nursing program because she questioned when Baker College instructed students to falsify and lie to patients for vaccination.
The case is derived from two separate classes held in 2013 by two different instructors who, a few days apart, instructed students who were in the middle of real patient clinics to threaten and scare patients to accept immunizations.
The threats included the withholding of state medical assistance payments, the denial of access to newborns and the handing over of false information.
Michigan law protects the right of patients to informed consent
Under Michigan law, patients have the right to choose, and refuse, any and all medical treatments offered by hospitals.
During the statements, the Baker College instructors deny that these instructions have been given. Others in the room at that time have testified, under oath, that such directives were taught.
Rolfe, a student who paid Baker College more than $ 40,000 in tuition and fees, simply asked the instructors, how can nurses do that?
In the following days, the director of the nursing department decided to dismiss Rolfe in an impromptu meeting just before a scheduled class.
Rolfe, in court documents, states that his dismissal was simply for questioning illegal addresses to nursing students. Baker College contends that his dismissal was in the "opposite" and "aggressive" manner in which Rolfe's questions were formulated.
"Nurses must obey the patient's directives, not threaten or lie"
After exchanging pre-trial evidence, Baker College asked the Court to dismiss the case, citing that Rolfe's tests, being audio recordings of meetings with administrators while at Baker College, violated the audio recording policies of Baker College. Baker College also sought to limit the amount of damages claimed by Rolfe.
In an oral decision of the court, Judge Joseph Farah denied the motions and concluded that none of the arguments justified the dismissal or the limitation of the case. The decision now allows the case to go before a jury in Genesee County.
"The Circuit Court's decision allows jurors to hear what Baker College really did and what its instructors are teaching Michigan's future nurses, the same nurses who will take care of patients in their weakest physical condition," says Philip. L. Ellison, Rolfe's lawyer. "Nurses must obey the patient's instructions, not threaten or lie."
Also at the hearing, Baker College also tried to prevent the release of certain emails between the director of the nursing department and an instructor about the case, and to avoid the last deposition of a key witness, another former nursing student. The judge denied Baker's two requests.
Sources: Healthnutnews.com; Olcplc.com; / Reference: Mlive.com
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