Healthcare CEO Told Nurses to Fatally Overdose Patients to Increase Profit

Anti-Media – by Josh Mur

Frisco, TX — After an ongoing FBI investigation revealed incriminating information, Brad Harris, CEO of Novus Health Care Services, is being accused of ordering nurses to hasten the deaths of patients.

Novus Health Care Service is a company based in Frisco, Texas that provides in-house care for terminally ill and elderly patients. The company’s website indicates clearly that Novus prides itself on the quality of care and “improved patient outcomes” as a result of the services its employees provide. However, an affidavit released by the FBI suggests Brad Harris has failed to comply with the principles of his own company.  

The investigation began in 2014, when Novus was facing allegations of offering services to patients who did not apply for them. Novus was also accused of collecting funds for “unnecessary” services and procedures. During the investigation, Harris’ underlying scheme was discovered. Text messages the CEO sent to employees revealed he regularly instructed nurses to overdose patients with medication, often morphine, to hasten people’s deaths.

“You need to make this patient go bye-bye,” read one text from the executive.“Find patients who would die within 24 hours,” Harris reportedly told other healthcare executives, according to the FBI’s affidavit.

The FBI alleges Harris “instructed a nurse to administer overdoses to three patients and directed another employee to increase a patient’s medication to four-times the maximum allowed.” Both the nurse and the other employee refused to carry out the orders.

Harris’ text messages and conversations with other executives do not reflect the language or attitude an average medical patient might want or expect from the company providing their care. But what could inspire such a cynical and negligent approach to his vision of “improving patient outcomes?”

Simply put: profit. Like other care providers, Novus is subject to an “aggregator cap,” which prevents companies from earning higher revenues from hospice stays. In other words, prolonged treatment and care do not necessarily mean a larger check for hospice providers. In fact, with payments through Medicare and Medicaid, providers can actually be forced to pay back a portion of their fee if a patient lives too long.

Currently, no charges have been filed against Harris or his company. The FBI declined to comment on the investigation.

http://theantimedia.org/healthcare-ceo-told-nurses-overdose/

14 thoughts on “Healthcare CEO Told Nurses to Fatally Overdose Patients to Increase Profit

  1. “You need to make this patient go bye-bye,” read one text from the executive.”

    We need to make all allopathic doctors go bye-bye.

    “… he regularly instructed nurses to overdose patients with medication, often morphine, to hasten people’s deaths.”

    Isn’t that premeditated murder?

    Freakin’ scumbag! Had he done that to one of my family members, he wouldn’t have to worry about court after that.

  2. Look at how far the United States has progressed in a little over seven years under the thumb of the monkey king. The US Constitution has been gutted and is practically worthless, sworn oath’s are worthless, lawlessness and lies abound in Washington DC, established laws don’t mean a damn thing anymore, and now I guess people, other then uniformed thugs can murder others without fear of consequences. Amazing how low in just seven years.

    1. Death by MediSIN has been going on for a very very long time….since Rockefellers took over the system and demonized the homeopaths…..sadly many sheeple bought into the scam….

    2. Nobody despises ol’ Barry worse than I do, but we stay to the truth here.
      He was handed the baton to run another stretch. Behind him was George W. Bush, father of the Patriot Act. Before him was “I have doubled the federal police force during my administration”, Billy the stinky finger Clinton, who was handed the baton by ex-CIA Director and directly involved with JFK’s murder, “Just read my Papa Doc lips” Bush, who received the baton from “Just say no to drugs or I’ll take everything you have and kill you” 40 billion dollar a year drug war, complete with anti-Bill of Rights asset forfeiture laws Nancy Reagan’s gun running dope dealing old man Ronnie.
      This shit didn’t happen overnight and they all shit through the same asshole. Just to keep it straight.

      1. Thank you. Saved me the trouble. You remind me of a friend of mine who recently passed. His name was Jack. One of the smartest men I ever met.

  3. Legally, nurses carry out only orders written by a licensed MD. However a nurse is under no obligation to follow any physician order which may prove harmful to a patient. She is obliged to inform said MD about her objections to follow such an order. She is also obliged to inform her supervisor and the on call hospital administrator of her objection(s) if the supervisor has not done so. Then an ‘incident’ report is filled out and sent to appropriate personnel. Beware the hospice system.

  4. We need to make all health care administrators go bye-bye!

    I do believe this “overdosing” is more prevalent than we would like to believe. I wouldn’t doubt that it’s industry-wide. SSDD, killing people for a buck. 👿

  5. I have my own personal Texas nursing home horror story very similar the this one. Texas and elder abuse is like a hand in a glove, can’t separate them.

  6. WOW! This is the next town over from where I live. Scary.

    ““You need to make this patient go bye-bye,” read one text from the executive.“Find patients who would die within 24 hours,” Harris reportedly told other healthcare executives, according to the FBI’s affidavit.

    Currently, no charges have been filed against Harris or his company. The FBI declined to comment on the investigation.”

    Yea, because apparently telling their employees to make their patients go bye-bye and then almost having them do it doesn’t warrant an arrest for attempted murder in any way.

    Yea….tell me another one.

    Unfrigginbelievable….

  7. I quit working and took in my mom and dad to give them the care they needed. Dad 6 years and mom16 she almost made 95 short of two months. She was a strong woman.

    I am poor now because I stopped working at 55 because I worked nights and slept days but now I had to help them in the day time and sleep at night. I was a nurse and a good one. I would not change a thing if I had to do over. There is no way they would have lived so long in a nursing home. Plus I built them an apartment attached to the house 520 square feet that had a bedroom full handicapped bath and a large family room with a fireplace. My mom loved those and had one in her home in NY. They had a dining area so they could be together all the time and had privacy too. Now it is my apartment and my daughter has the rest of the house. This is all I need and it is very comfortable and very attractive to the eye.

    Couldn’t be happier.

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