The Young Nurses (2023) Movie Script

(catchy music)
Nurse can you help this man
He's got a bad case of the blues
Nurse he's fading fast
so I hope you won't refuse
He gets so excited
When you walk through his door
Even gone up five degrees
You can feel his pulse rate soar
Don't give him no pill
And he don't need no shot
All he needs is a
little of what you got
[Matt] Hey!
Hey girls, how about some company?
(rescue sirens)
(dramatic music)
(rescue sirens)
(dramatic music)
Nurse! Where is your uniform?
I'm off-duty now.
And on display.
You gotta get the meat to market.
[Joanne] This is a stickup.
Joanne, this is an operation.
Where have you been, nurse?
We don't wait around here, you know.
When we operate, we operate.
Scalpel.
Which one, doctor?
What would you use?
Damn it, learn something
here, take a look.
What would you use? Come on.
Give me a 20.
Damn it.
Wasn't for the doctor, poor
kid would be pushing daisies.
[Joanne] It would be the
first fatal shoulder blade
in the history of medicine.
[Doctor] Is someone talking?
Is someone carrying on a
conversation in my operating room?
Give me a clamp.
You call that a clamp?
Use your head, this is
a person we're cutting
not a Christmas turkey.
Out, get over here.
Jesus.
I'm getting a really
weird reading on him.
[Doctor] Weird? Is
that now a medical term?
What are you getting, flying saucers?
His respiratory flow volume's dropped
from seven liters to three.
[Doctor] Nothing to worry about.
Kid's had congenital spots
on one lung since he was,
well ever since the first time I saw him
when I was holding him in one hand.
Give me a forceps, here.
No, I. Oh, you're right, you're right.
Don't give me what I ask
for, give me what I need.
Congratulations.
It's a shoulder blade.
Really? Is he really okay?
The mother and the shoulder
blade are doing fine.
Oh, good.
They're putting him in 314.
Thanks a lot, okay?
In seven minutes, I'll be exploring
the gastrointestinal
tract of one Ms. Imbrolio.
Meanwhile, we have this
room that old Ed left
who departed us last night.
Leaving us?
His invitingly and vacant room and bed.
In seven minutes?
Sorry, doc.
(peaceful music)
Hi.
Where's the ocean?
Oh, the ocean's still out there.
We had a little accident.
Hey boy, how's tricks?
Looks like they pulled one on me, dad.
They say some babe had to
pull you out of the drink, huh?
Excuse me.
Who sent you the flowers,
nobody even knows you've been sick.
I did.
What is that?
Just the babe who pulled
him out of the drink.
Dumb. Dumb thing to do.
If you don't control your
boom, it's gonna control you.
Now, if you screw up like
that in that regatta,
you're gonna have a
crew mutiny on your hands.
I'm his crew.
Well, up and at 'em, man.
I gotta go, business calls, you know.
Wait a minute, wait a
minute, I almost forgot.
Just in case you wanna
buy yourself a cigar, huh?
Thanks, dad.
Okay baby, take it easy.
He's not much on formalities,
neither am I.
Hey, who are you?
Just the babe who pulled you.
I'm Kitty.
I'm Matt.
Why do hospitals always
have to smell like a hospital.
Here, how about a breath
of ocean breeze number five.
Hi! How is he?
(amorous music)
(funky music)
(door knocking)
Teddy?
Teddy?
(rescue sirens)
Every time a junkie dies
the crime rate goes down.
That kid is not a junkie.
I've been treating him for two months.
For what?
Conjunctivitis.
My ass.
His eye.
My job is to take care of people
who can't give back to the hospital.
Yeah well, you got one
less patient to worry about.
Hey, lighten up on him.
Hey lady, the kid's dead.
So just go on and let him die, right?
Part of the job.
Nothing in the rule book says
I gotta go to the funeral.
Give it up, man.
(pleasant music)
Dr. Krebs was right about one thing,
you are a fast-rising young surgeon.
What are you doing?
No exercise, doctor's orders.
You know how many doctors have made
that same statement to me?
Turn over and be quiet.
[Matt] That's enough, thanks.
No, it's not enough.
Look, I didn't ask for this job.
Hey, I'm lying. I requested this duty.
I got jealous when I thought
of anybody else doing it.
You mean someone was
killed by this stuff?
Yeah.
It's amazing.
I'd love a chance at the body.
I'd like to run some
tests on a guy who died
from an injection of vitamin
B, B-12, E, and niacin.
I mean, that's all there was.
Not in the binding
agent, whatever that was.
It wasn't enough to kill him.
Then what did?
Check back with me tomorrow.
I'll see if the body of your late friend
can tell me anything.
Okay.
He's in there throwing
needles at that poor old lady
like she was a dartboard.
This woman has no veins, it's fantastic.
Is that possible?
[PA System] Nurse Henderson, staff 317.
Nurse Henderson, please.
The call of the wild.
If this woman has a vein, you find it.
[PA System] Dr. Krebs
to surgery, Dr. Krebs.
Anyone knowing disassembly procedures
for a revolving door,
report to maintenance.
I'll stay with her a while.
Can you run into 328, and give Mr. Farrell
his penicillin for me?
Remember, just pinch the
skin and plunge cleanly.
Pinch the skin and plunge cleanly.
Sure.
Why can't they just let me die?
Or go to Philadelphia?
They didn't have one
single magazine about boats,
do you believe that?
That's okay, maybe "This Old
Life's" got a sports section.
Hey kid, you're looking good.
Looks like you can sail this afternoon.
Here are some pictures for you.
Wow, look at that view.
Can almost see the boat from here.
I think it would be better if we could
keep his mind off of boats for a while.
Look it, so the kid's
got a little problem.
You treat him like an invalid,
he's gonna become an invalid.
Well, if I'd known how hard
you were trying to kill him,
I wouldn't have bothered saving him.
He's not trying to kill me.
Kindness kills too, you know.
Which way do you prefer, Matt?
[Mr. Fairbanks] What's with her?
I understand you've been
giving medical lessons again?
I needed some help.
When I first came here, my ambition,
which I have achieved, was to
be head nurse not head doctor.
You would be wise to
have a similar ambition
in your hostile mind.
I am not hostile.
You know there aren't enough doctors here.
I can take care of some
of the smaller jobs,
takes the pressure off them
for the more important things.
You wanna do a doctor's job.
You want the candy
stripers to do your job,
then who's gonna do you
the candy striper's job?
The cleaning ladies?
You get your way, you'll have the patients
emptying their own bedpans.
No, I wouldn't, emptying
bedpans is a nurse's job.
The binding agent wasn't
a binding agent at all.
It was drug called quagrin.
Never even heard of it.
The government refused to approve it.
It had a couple of problems.
First of all, it was an aphrodisiac.
Seems there'd be a market for that.
I'd buy it, unfortunately,
it was a couple
of other things too.
Just a tad more than the proper dosage,
you started hallucinating.
And then by the time you were getting tired
of whatever vision you were
having, you went into a coma.
Nothing like happy
endings for a hallucination.
Oh, it got happier.
Up the dosage another zip,
it's time to pick your pallbearers.
Once they found out what the
stuff was, they locked it up.
Well, you can tell them
some of it's leaking out.
[Haskell] In, come on Jeff. Out.
Keep right on going, just the
way you do it all the time.
Up and down, up and down, up and down.
Come on, run, run, run, run, run.
Hey, for crying out loud.
Take it easy, take it easy, Jeff.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Leave him alone, I'm a nurse.
Come on.
How do you feel?
I'm okay, Doc.
Oh, that's fine, Jeff. That's fine,
that's fine, that's fine, that's fine.
Now let's come up.
That was very reckless
of you, you know that.
I'm sorry.
Are you really all right?
Doctor?
Yes, that's right.
I think that's wonderful.
Hey, don't you remember me?
No.
Michelle.
- Michelle--
- [Haskell] Rhodes.
- Right, right.
- [Haskell] Sandy's daughter.
- How are you doing?
- [Michelle] I'm fine.
A nurse, now?
Right.
All right, you come right down here.
I'm really sorry.
Well, well, well, so and
what are you in now, surgery?
Medicine.
Medicine? Oh. Are you all right?
You all right, Jeff? That's good.
(groaning)
Sit down, that's fine.
You all right now?
Sandy Rhodes's daughter.
Yeah.
I just didn't know
you were all grown up.
Dr. Haskell, have you ever
heard of a drug called quagrin?
[Haskell] Hmm?
[Michelle] I'm trying to
find out where it comes from.
A friend of mine was killed by it.
[Haskell] I'm sorry to hear that.
Quagrin? Nope, never heard of it.
You see, I try to use natural
herbs instead of drugs.
There's so many new names of
drugs in the medical monthly.
If I run across quagrin,
I'll let you know.
[Michelle] Thank you, I'd
appreciate that, doctor.
Hold the speculum closed.
Now just relax, take
your time, that's right.
Now hold the mirror like that.
Now you can see if there's
any sign of infection.
You're fine.
And it didn't cost you
40 bucks to find out.
If you should see any sign of infection,
the best thing to do is just
pick up some plain yogurt.
No flavor?
[Joanne] Oh, I don't think
you're going to notice.
I was thinking of my boyfriend.
Come on, get dressed.
Do you really think you're
going to get that grant?
I do. You really think you're
going to come work for me?
I don't see how I could
survive on $50 a week.
You would be surprised how long it takes
to starve to death.
I've lasted over a year.
I've lasted longer than that,
and I don't make any money at all.
You should get your boyfriend
to pay for everything.
You're not looking at the whole thing.
The thing that you don't like
is that it's run by a woman.
The thing I don't
like is it's unlicensed.
It's unusual.
It's a lot more effective
than anything you could do,
and a hell of a lot cheaper.
I don't see her driving one
of those fancy Aston-Martins.
Look, what do you want me to do?
Do you want me to quit
cashing my paychecks?
I just want you to start
caring about something
besides them.
(upbeat music)
[Michelle] Hey, fella!
Lester!
Well, I'll be.
All good things come to those who wait.
(laughing)
What's happening?
How are you doing, baby?
Okay.
Been working a lot.
There used to be a time when you didn't
have to work so much.
It used to be nice until you said,
"Hey baby, let's go down to the Baja."
And you forgot to tell me
that pinata you picked up
was full of Peruvian cocaine.
Hey baby, I ain't dealing in nothing now
except with this boat yard here.
Oh yeah?
I was kind of hoping you
were still on the streets.
Well, I still hear
something every now and then.
Lester, you ever heard
of a drug called quagrin?
[Lester] No.
I didn't neither until today.
Hey baby, remember that poncho
I brought back from La Paz?
Won't you go inside and put it on,
and I'll take you out somewhere.
Okay.
Is it still in the same place?
[Lester] You know it.
Hey Lester! No, nah-uh!
Come on, get your hands off the bike.
Last time you messed with
it, you blew out my gear box.
And had me walking for two days.
You gonna meet me later or what?
Let's make it tomorrow,
I have to make some runs.
[Lester] 4:30 at the Sea View?
[Michelle] Okay. Bye-bye.
Ciao.
This isn't exercise.
Sitting isn't exercise, and lying
in bed isn't exercise.
Well, what exactly are you in training for?
Oh, for life, I guess.
For what?
No, for the regatta, really.
Matt, you can't sail with that shoulder.
Don't tell me I can't.
All right, I won't tell you you can't.
I like people who tell me I can.
[Kitty] Okay, you can.
(charming music)
Oh, a little private
duty, too, huh, nurse?
Just physical therapy.
A treat instead of a treatment,
and I'll bet she's pretty
good at it too, huh Matt?
[Matt] Dad?
Aw come on, you know
me, I'm only kidding you.
Life's a ball, you gotta take
it and run with it, right?
I gotta run too, you
take care of yourself.
Oh god, I bet the night nurses forgot
to mark his injection again.
The second time in a month.
Nancy, get me Dr. Krebs, quick.
What's he doing operating?
He's not gonna die or anything.
Laboratory emergency.
Yeah, this is Joanne.
I got a patient with a
double dose of insulin.
I need glucogen, 1 cc, stat.
Well, I'm ordering it.
Dr. Krebs authorization.
The man's in a coma so get it quick.
If you go into medicine,
do it as a doctor.
(blues music)
(rescue sirens)
What a time to be a
manager of a rock star.
In the middle of a song, his voice breaks.
I'm paying $85 an hour for this studio,
you guys go back in there and play.
What I wanna know is why didn't you
just drive him to the hospital?
Because it looks a little more real
to take him to the
hospital in an ambulance.
Oh, looks terrific in the papers, too.
Right, but this guy can't
sing, he can't even hum.
He never could hum.
(screaming)
Do you know her blood type?
Get her admitted, I'll meet her in surgery
with a cross-match.
But you know you can't do that.
You worry about her,
I'll take care of it.
I need one unit, universal
donor type blood, now.
Unauthorized?
Forget it.
That woman does not need three copies
of a doctor's signature,
she needs blood, now.
And cross-matched.
Okay.
I'll tell them I had
nothing to do with it.
Tell him whatever you want.
Tell him I bit you on the neck
for it, just give it to me.
Thank you.
Nurses.
That patient will not be
admitted to the hospital
until we have his full name.
You got his full name.
Chicken is his full name.
Ask five million record buyers,
Chicken is his full name.
[Dockett] His age?
We don't give that out.
[Dockett] Who do you think you are?
I'm his manager.
I get 15 percent of everything
he gets, including his pain.
Does he have hospitalization?
How are you gonna get insurance on a guy
that started four riots in six weeks?
Or six riots in four
weeks, we can't even count.
Then we can't admit him.
What?
[Dockett] We've had too many experiences
with people who don't pay their bills.
There's no way to repossess
an operation, you know.
Look lady, this guy gets $60,000 a riot.
Four more riots, he
could buy the hospital.
Now, he doesn't need an operation,
he just has a little laryngitis.
What's he doing in a wheelchair anyway?
I can have you put into
a wheelchair too, buster.
Thanks, I'll walk. I'm
taking him to his room.
Hold it, buddy, I'm
taking him to his room.
I have to have a last
name on that creature.
Well, if it'll make you happy,
his full name is Chicken Delight.
(phone ringing)
[Kitty] Aren't you glad I
got you out of the hospital?
[Matt] You better believe it.
Now, isn't this more
fun than sailing a boat?
Well, some people like sailing boats
and some people like flying kites.
Besides, sailing isn't the only
thing that gives me pleasure.
- Oh yeah?
- [Matt] Yeah.
What gives you pleasure?
You.
What are you doing?
I'm flying a kite.
(pleasant music)
Hey!
(barking)
Hi!
Come on, come on.
(barking)
What are we gonna do with the kite?
(exciting music)
(panting)
Hey!
Hey!
(screaming)
[Michelle] No!
Hey!
(groaning)
No business calls?
This is business.
Then get down to it.
And let's stick to business, shall we?
You're a nurse, right?
Then you stick to being a nurse.
You take care of my boy's body,
but you don't fuck with his mind.
I'm not.
My job is to help him get well.
- Listen, girl.
- [Kitty] You listen.
It's more important for Matt to get better
than to sail in some race just so that you
can get your picture in the paper.
Do you know who you're talking to?
Mm-hmm, a man who's getting older.
And who's mad because his son
is getting more attention.
That kid's gonna live to be 80,
but he won't be half as
good as I am in any way.
Mr. Fairbanks, I hate to
be the one to tell you this,
seeing how much you love competition.
But this is one race you've already lost.
Why you little bitch,
I'll show you who's lost--
(yelps) Goddamn it.
(grunting)
(tense music)
(screaming)
(groaning)
And she said to him, "Well
you guys all have your brains"
"between your legs."
And then he tells her, he said,
"Well, that gives me a mind-blowing idea."
Look like you got
hit by a typhoon, girl.
Can we go sit down?
Take my hat.
Detective business getting rough, huh?
I just ran into a couple of guys
didn't like me looking around.
Shit, it took me a damn
hour to get my bike running.
Lester baby, you have got to help me.
Hey baby, the best way I can help you
is to tell you to quit it.
Or even take you with me.
With what?
You haven't got a dime to take me on.
Then I'll find one.
Hey. (laughing) I wanna--
You wanna what?
What's wrong?
(funky music)
Quagrin?
Yeah.
- Did you know?
- [Lester] No.
Oh, how much?
Enough to kill me?
No.
Well then, enough for what?
Whatever you want.
Michelle.
Come here, baby.
Come here.
Come on.
(psychedelic music)
(tense music)
[Kid] Mommy look, he's dead.
(mellow music)
(suspenseful music)
Yes, Marina Del Ray.
I need the listing for the CU Club.
[Haskell] Quagrin,
nope, never heard of it.
Operator, forget it. Thanks.
Hi, Michelle.
Hi, Kitty.
See what I made for Matt?
[Michelle] Hey, beautiful.
I thought as long as he
was gonna not be on his boat
this would be the next
best thing, you know.
Yeah, listen, I gotta be
on duty in half an hour,
but I gotta make a run,
can you cover for me?
Well, sure.
Thanks.
Anything wrong?
No, I just gotta get
a prescription filled.
(toilet flushing)
What are you doing dressed?
I'm leaving.
You're what?
I'm not gonna miss that race.
My father's checking me out.
But that's dangerous.
[Matt] I'll survive.
[Kitty] Hey, I brought you...
(giggling)
It's a candy striper's
job to make the patient's
stay in the hospital more pleasant.
This is not what we mean by pleasant.
It was pleasant, wasn't it?
You do have a tendency to overstep
your authority occasionally.
When there are enough doctors,
I'll stick to emptying bedpans.
You did order that emergency
cross-match yesterday.
You should've waited.
The patient couldn't wait.
Well, I'm glad you admit it anyway.
Shows you're willing to
accept the responsibility
for your actions.
But it's unfortunate that
because of what you did
that woman now has septicemia.
We'll be lucky, frankly, if she lives.
Because if she lives, she'll sue.
Is there anything I can do?
You can stay home for a day or two
until I can get the board
together for a hearing.
I am sorry.
I'm sorry too, Joanne.
For a nurse, you're a hell of a doctor.
And you should've waited.
We'll be lucky, frankly, if she lives.
[Nurse Dockett] Head
Nurse, not Head Doctor.
[Dr. Krebs] For a nurse,
you're a hell of a doctor.
[Candy striper] He's
not gonna die or anything?
[Nurse Dockett] You
wanna do a doctor's job.
[Dr. Krebs] We'll be
lucky, frankly, if she lives.
Now, you see how easy that was?
And that is what I
had been paying $25 for.
You know, they ought to
be arrested, doctors.
They're bandits, all of them.
You're okay kid, I gotta tell
my sister about this place.
Of course, she lives in Omaha.
Maybe I'll send her a telegram.
Why don't you tell all your
friends about this place.
Yeah, I think I'm
going to, it's fantastic.
Wish I had known about it earlier,
I'd be saving money all these years.
Okay, thanks a lot.
- See you later.
- Okay.
- Hi.
- Hi.
How are things?
Looking up. How about you?
You wouldn't believe it.
Oh, Ms. Whiting?
[Chris] Yes.
I'm Lucille Anders, from the Times,
we talked on the phone.
Oh yes, this is Joanne
Scott, my assistant.
Joanne, Ms. Anders.
How do you do?
No, Mrs. Anders. I prefer Missus.
I'm not ashamed of the
fact that I'm married.
However, I'll be referring to you as Ms.,
if that's what you'd like.
Your choice, should
we go in the other room?
Oh. Okay.
To tell you the truth,
I got this assignment
because I'm female.
I'd much rather be writing about fires.
We can burn the place
down if that would help.
What I'm after is a little
story for the Woman's section.
Something about your background,
a little about your home life.
My favorite recipes?
Oh, this may turn out
to be okay after all.
How about all the famous
people that visit us here.
The Fire Commissioner,
the Board of Health,
the Vice Squad.
You really are busy.
Oh, we're a regular tourist attraction.
We've even been inspected by
the restaurant license people
for using yogurt in our treatment.
Yogurt?
About the treatment--
Hey, why don't we have a picture
of you learning to examine yourself.
Oh, no. No, no, no, no,
I have someone to do that.
An actual gynecologist.
Why don't you examine your assistant?
I'm sure she wouldn't object.
Oh, no not at all.
We do have other functions
here besides training women
to find infection.
I'll bet you do.
We do VD tests, we have classes
in birth control techniques.
We have a class in natural
childbirth starting next week.
That's never appealed to me.
Natural childbirth is so,
somehow it's unnatural.
We also have a referral
service for abortions.
Where's Mchumba?
Mchumba?
(upbeat music)
Thank you.
[Chris] You've gotta be
more careful what you say
to people like that.
She deserved it.
Well, I didn't.
She writes one good article,
and maybe I'll be able
to go a day or two without every inspector
in LA County trying to
close the place down.
You just have to keep fighting them.
That is not the way I work.
That's the only way you can work.
Look, Joanne, medicine is
big business in this country
and we're trying to buck it.
We've gotta stay cool or they
are gonna kick our heads in.
I thought you were
willing to take risks.
Don't tell me what I'm willing to do.
Not until you're willing to come down here
and put your head in the noose with mine.
Are you coming back?
I don't know.
- Hi, Kitty.
- [Kitty] Hi.
[Mr. Fairbanks] How are you doing, babe?
It's good to see you.
Hi.
I brought you something for good luck.
What's the matter?
I think you know.
[Kitty] No, I don't.
Why don't you go and ask my father?
Your father? What did he--
[Matt] He told me all about it.
Did he tell you that I
stabbed him with a needle?
I thought he stabbed you.
You're kidding, he really told you that?
You did go out with him.
I wouldn't go out with your father
if he were my father.
Hey, take me with you.
My father has to crew for me.
Your father, huh?
Is that a rule?
That's a tradition, that's
more important than a rule.
Sure it is.
Until you find yourself a new tradition.
Come on.
You're gonna race to win?
I was racing to win when I
pulled you out of the water.
Please?
Come on.
(victorious music)
You're gonna lose!
After all I did for you!
You're gonna lose!
After all he did for
you, you're gonna lose.
After all he did for me, I almost did.
[Race Announcer] Sailing
class ready to start.
10, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four,
three, two, one.
(gunshot)
All clear!
(tranquil music)
(sneaky music)
[Haskell] Quagrin,
nope never heard of it.
(exciting music)
Well, Michelle, how are you?
It's a pleasure to see you.
How do you feel?
Lester, would you please close the door?
Told you you were messing with
the wrong kind of people.
You know, I'm not really angry with you.
I'm only angry with those beach boys.
You know, I had to get rid of them
the same way, you see, that
I had to get rid of you.
(screaming)
(groaning)
Lester, I can't let him die!
Old man had money
coming in from all sides.
All them medicare payments them
old folks was giving to him.
And he was overcharging them like crazy.
It's over with now.
Got Floyd on the street.
Dealing this shit, shooting
it in people's arms.
That's going, too.
That man was a goddamn tycoon.
Sure he was.
What are you?
Hey baby, I wasn't anything.
I didn't even know what the stuff was
until you started coming around
asking questions about it.
All I knew was he had an
island somewhere in Baja
where he made his stash
before they outlawed it.
Found out what the stuff did,
decided it was about
time for him to retire.
So you planned on killing
him all the time, right?
Not from the beginning, baby.
Not till you came back.
I figured that we might
as well get that money
and do it together, make
a life for ourselves.
Hey baby, we had some good times together.
Yeah, we did.
Will you come with me?
You always did like boats.
I always did like money, you know.
And I always did like you.
Goodbye, Lester.
Michelle?
I wasn't really asking you.
I'm telling you, you're coming with me.
(tranquil music)
Ready to come about.
What are you doing?
[Matt] I'm pulling out of the race.
Why?
Because I've already won.
You have, huh?
Why, don't you think I'm a winner?
Sure, I think you're a winner.
Michelle, hey I got a
quarter million dollars
of that old man's money down there.
Hey Michelle, all we gotta
do is dump him out at sea.
He would do it to you.
Hey look, baby, there's no
point in me going any place
if I can't go with you.
Michelle.
Hey baby, I did it all for you.
Michelle!
Look, we've been together a long time now.
Come down on me, because I was a joke.
You got a problem?
Are you crazy?
We got a boat full of stolen
money and a dead body onboard.
And me.
[Matt] Hey, ahoy there!
[Kitty] Are you okay?
[Michelle] You guys mind
giving me a ride back?
What you gonna do,
leave me here by myself?
Oh now, baby, would I do that?
As soon as I get back, I'ma
call the Coast Guard
to come out and rescue you, okay?
Of course now, it might
take a couple of hours
to get to a phone, but, I
think you can deal with it.
Bye, baby.
[Lester] Michelle?
(cheerful music)
We have the pathologist report
that the patient, Mrs. Johnson.
Yes, Mrs. Johnson contracted
and died of septicemia
as a result of a transfusion
which was given her
on, I don't know what the date is.
May we have the first witness?
In my whole nine years
here, I have not seen
as many infractions of
the established procedures
as this young lady
committed single-handed.
Just what she needs.
[Dr. Krebs] Is someone
talking? This is a hearing.
Continue, Nurse Dockett.
When nurses don't follow the
rules, the hospital suffers.
And when nurses do follow
the rules, the patients suffer.
[Nurse Dockett] Everyone
has their duties to perform,
and if everyone performs their own duties,
the hospital will be better off.
The important thing
then is for the hospital
to run smoothly?
[Nurse Dockett] An efficient hospital
is a healthy hospital.
My concern is with the hospital
not with the individual patient.
One of the charges brought against me
is that I treated a man for insulin shock
without a doctor's approval.
Dr. Krebs, did I try to
reach you for permission?
[Dr. Krebs] Yes, you did.
That man would've been
dead if I had waited for you.
Now, I'd rather lose a
job than lose a patient.
About the cross-match--
I think there's some testimony
that needs to be heard here.
What are you doing?
I'm saving your ass.
Our friend, the nurse here, was dragged
into this tribunal for one thing,
ordering an unauthorized
blood cross-match, yes?
[Dr. Krebs] Among others.
Well, let's just that was one
of the final straws, okay?
How many cases of
septicemia in this hospital
since this nurse has been
relieved of her duties?
Four.
Well then, it couldn't have
been the procedure at all,
it had to be the blood.
We ran tests on it, the
whole shipment was infected.
We get blood from all over.
There's no way of knowing
if some wino on skid row
walks into a blood bank with
any number of imperfections
in his blood.
Why didn't you, why
didn't anyone say anything
about this beforehand?
I was asked not to.
I was told there could
be a lot of lawsuits.
Who asked you not to?
I'd rather not say.
[Joanne] You tried to
cover up what you did
by pinning all this on me.
Well, the board has deliberated,
and we've reached a decision.
Under the circumstances,
we feel that you cannot
be held responsible for
the death of the woman.
We are not pleased with your methods,
but we've decided to be lenient,
and we are putting you on
probation for six months.
It doesn't matter.
[Dr. Krebs] I beg your pardon?
Thank you for the vote of confidence,
but I have another job.
When you get around to
treating your nurses
like human beings, and
your patients like people,
then you give me a call.
(upbeat music)
I still don't understand
why you didn't tell me before.
Anyway, I'm a free woman.
How free?
You still make housecalls?
I might need a doctor tonight.
That's one call I'll make free.
Free?
Free.
Nurse
Can you help this man
he's blue as he can be
Fever's up and his health is down
He needs your sympathy
The doctor says it's hopeless
He doubts that he'll pull through
Here's your chance
Just to prove what you can do