‘Killer nurse’ held for slaying 13 patients

‘Killer nurse’ held for slaying 13 patients
Updated 31 March 2016
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‘Killer nurse’ held for slaying 13 patients

‘Killer nurse’ held for slaying 13 patients

ROME: An Italian nurse has been arrested on suspicion of killing 13 elderly patients in the intensive care ward where she had worked for decades, police said on Thursday.
Fausta Bonino, 56, allegedly killed the patients aged between 61 and 88, over the course of 2014 and 2015 at a hospital in the Tuscan town of Piombino, local police said. The “hospital ward killer,” as police have called her, administered lethal doses of a blood-thinning drug into her victims’ intravenous drips. Twelve died of internal bleeding and one of cardiac arrest, police said.
Investigators believe the victims, all seriously but not terminally ill, died as a result of being given strong doses of anticoagulant drugs used to prevent blood clotting, triggering internal bleeding.
Bonino was arrested after a study of all the recent abnormal deaths at the hospital identified her as being the only staff member involved in every case, the AGI news agency reported.
“In the horror rankings we have reached a new peak of human misery,” Health Minister Beatrice Lorenzin said in a statement. Bonino has been imprisoned pending formal charges.
Her case follows the arrest in October 2014 of Daniela Poggiali, a then 42-year-old nurse who is suspected of killing up to 38 of her patients and is awaiting trial for the murder of one of them.
Poggiali achieved global notoriety after it emerged she had taken ‘selfies’ next to recently deceased patients and as a result of reports that she had given huge doses of potassium to sick people she found “annoying.”
They did not identify the suspect, who worked at a hospital in Piombino, a city on the Tuscan coast. The alleged murders all took place in 2014 and 2015, although she had worked there for many years prior to that.
Some of the victims, men and women aged between 61 and 88, were found to have 10 times the normal dose of the drug Heparin in their bloodstream even though they had not been prescribed it.
The suspect was the only member of hospital staff working when all 13 of the suspicious deaths occurred, Carabinieri police commander Gennero Riccardi told reporters.
When she became a suspect and was transferred out of intensive care in October of last year, the mortality rate of the ward fell from 20 percent to 12 percent, he said.
“We do not yet know of a specific motive,” Riccardi said. “But the suspect suffers from depression.” She had been receiving psychological treatment for many years, he added.
Police detained the woman late on Wednesday when she returned from a holiday with her husband. The families of the victims have not yet been informed that their relatives may have been murdered, police said.
Health Minister Beatrice Lorenzin called the case “chilling, hideous,” in a statement in which she said: “It isn’t the first time that nurses have been found to be serial killers.”
Earlier this month, a nurse in the city of Ravenna was given a life sentence for murdering a patient with a lethal injection of potassium. She is under investigation for some 10 more suspicious deaths and is appealing her conviction.