Death Nurse

Death Nurse




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Death Nurse
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

^ McSlam, M. (1 December 2012). "Review: Death Nurse " . allstarvideo.blogspot.ca . All-Star Video . Retrieved 19 February 2014 .

^ C., Ryan (25 April 2012). "Nick Millard Round-Up: Death Nurse " . trashfilmguru.wordpress.com . Trash Film Guru . Retrieved 19 February 2014 .

^ Jane, Ian (31 December 2012). " Death Nurse " . rockshockpop.com . Rock! Shock! Pop! . Retrieved 19 February 2014 .

^ Fred, Anthro. " Death Nurse " . slasherpool.starbase.se . Internet Archive . Archived from the original on October 14, 2008 . Retrieved 19 February 2014 .


Death Nurse is a 1987 slasher film written and directed by Nick Millard. It was followed by a 1988 sequel entitled Death Nurse 2 .

From their suburban home, Doctor Gordon Mortley and his sister Nurse Edith run Shady Palms Clinic, a facility that takes in physically or mentally ill indigents sent to them by the county. In reality, the Mortleys are con artists who murder their patients (usually during "surgeries" performed on them by Gordon) and continue billing the state for their care afterward. The only permanent resident of the clinic is the alcoholic Louise Kagel. One day, a social services worker, Faith Chandler, drops off John Davis, a man afflicted with tuberculosis . Edith smothers John, and Gordon buries his body, though he is later forced to dig it up and crudely puppeteer it to create the illusion that Davis is still alive when Faith asks to check in on him after bringing Charles Bedowski, who has a heart condition, to Shady Palms.

After Faith's visit, Edith and Gordon kill Bedowski while attempting to replace his heart with a dead dog's. The procedure is interrupted by the Mortley family cat, who grabs the heart. Gordon and Edith chase the cat, and deem the transplant a failure. Bedowski's remains are buried by Gordon, and Edith feeds pieces of him to the rats that live in the garage. The infestation of vermin does not go unnoticed by the authorities, and when Mr. Smith, an environmental health officer , threatens to shut the clinic down, Edith stabs him to death.

Faith herself checks into Shady Palms, and grows suspicious of the facility, which causes Edith to knife her, after feeding the woman rats she had cooked her for lunch. Louise witnesses Faith's murder, so Edith kills her with a syringe , despite Gordon's fondness for her. Edith has Gordon place the bodies of Smith, Faith, and Louise in the garage, from which their smell attracts the attention of a police lieutenant who had stopped by to visit Charles Bedowski. Observing from a window as the lieutenant opens the garage and discovers what is inside it, a dejected Edith sits on a sofa with Gordon, and the film ends.

Slasher // Video released Death Nurse and its sequel on DVD in 2012. Limited to 1000 copies, the DVD includes features such as a Q&A with Nick Millard, and a commentary provided by him, Irmgard Millard, and Slasher // Video founder Jesus Terán. [1] [2]

Rock! Shock! Pop!'s Ian Jane called the film "fascinatingly watchable" despite its horribleness, and wrote, "The acting is amateur hour in the best/worst way possible but say what you will, the movie is something. Exactly what, it's hard to say but as far as slashers go, this one ranks down there with the cheapest of the cheap, the worst of the worse. As such, it's easy to love if you're in the right frame of mind for it. You'd be foolish to take any of it seriously, it's obvious that those making the picture weren't". [3] Slasherpool gave Death Nurse a 2 out of 5, finding some entertainment in Priscilla Alden's performance, the death scenes, and the film's ineptness and absurdity, concluding "The premise isn't a bad one... in fact, in more capable hands, this would make a pretty good black comedy ... but you get what you get". [4]

Nick Millard Priscilla Alden Albert Eskinazi Irmgard Millard Frances Millard

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That crazy killer nurse is at it again! Edith Mortley continues to slay more and more dumbfounded patients, turning them into rat food. That crazy killer nurse is at it again! Edith Mortley continues to slay more and more dumbfounded patients, turning them into rat food. That crazy killer nurse is at it again! Edith Mortley continues to slay more and more dumbfounded patients, turning them into rat food.
Again, another film where we have to see the same footage from Criminally Insane. I liked "Criminally Insane" but stop it, just stop it! This isn't Crazy Fat Ethel 4! It's not even a sequel either! This is just a 56 minute mess. I couldn't bare to watch anymore of it. Why does this still exist? Seriously, I have been asking this for years now! The actresses return as different characters, only because Nick has no life or friends that he can hire, but I bet they can make a better movie than Death Nurse. This could have the worst quality I've seen in a while. It could have the worst camera too. I mean, in one scene, everything was just so noisy I thought that was just the sound of fart noises mixed with rare VHS audio. Least this sequel doesn't have the hole digging scenes from the first film.
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A former nurse in Tennessee has been convicted in the accidental death of a patient after she injected her with a paralyzing drug instead of a sedative.
RaDonda Vaught, 38, was convicted by a jury Friday of criminal negligent homicide and gross neglect of an impaired adult after a three-day trial in Nashville closely watched by medical professionals, The Tennessean reported .
Vaught, a former nurse at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, was indicted in the December 2017 death of Charlene Murphey, whom she injected with the powerful paralyzing drug vecuronium, instead of a dose of a sedative called Versed.
Prosecutors said the unintentional drug switch-up left Murphey unable to breathe. The 75-year-old woman died a day after the injection left her brain-dead.
Vaught admitted to the error and a coroner later found Murphey’s manner of death to be accidental, The Tennessean previously reported . The woman had initially checked into the hospital with a subdural hematoma.
“I am just relieved that this portion of the process is over,” Vaught told reporters Friday. “I hope that they are also just as relieved to be moving away from this process that has been held up in the legal system for four and a half years.”
Prosecutors accused Vaught of disregarding warnings when she grabbed the wrong drug from an electronic dispensing cabinet that required her to search for it by name.
“This wasn’t an accident or mistake as it’s been claimed,” Assistant District Attorney Chad Jackson told jurors. “There were multiple chances for RaDonda Vaught to just pay attention.”
Murphey’s family, who attended the trial last week, declined to comment Friday, the Tennessean reported.
Vaught and her attorney had claimed she was being wrongly blamed after Vanderbilt became the subject of a surprise inspection by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
“Someone has to pay the price, and it’s really easy to say, ‘Just let her do it,’” Vaught said prior to the verdict. “Nurses see that. Medics see it. Radiology technicians see it.”
Vaught’s sentencing has been set for May 13. She faces three to six years in prison for the gross neglect conviction and one to two years for criminally negligent homicide.
The former nurse’s sentences are likely to run concurrently, a Davidson County District Attorney’s Office spokesman told NPR .
A nursing advocacy group, meanwhile, fears the “shocking” verdict puts the future of the profession at risk.
“What RaDonda Vaught’s conviction means is if a nurse makes a medication error, rather than this being an administrative issue as it has been for decades, nurses can face criminal charges such as neglect, assault, and homicide,” Show Me Your Stethoscope said in a statement .
The group’s founder said what happened to Vaught could’ve happened to anyone in such a demanding job.
“What’s happened here is that health care has been completely changed,” founder Janie Harvey Garner told the Associated Press. “Now when we tell the truth, we’re incriminating ourselves.”

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