×

Forensic nurses needed

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — The young woman who walked into an emergency room in Milwaukee began her journey about 12 hours earlier, at a Chicago-area hospital, more than 90 miles away.

She had been raped, but there was no one trained to do a forensic examination at the first hospital she went to — or the next, or the next, or the next. So she drove herself from place to place.

Finally, in Milwaukee, she met Jacqueline Callari Robinson, a sexual assault nurse examiner who spent hours with her, examining her physical injuries, collecting evidence from her body in a rape kit and trying to calm her down.

“She said she felt humiliated to walk into the hospitals,” recalled Robinson. “The trauma was pretty overwhelming. We actually just sat in the interview room with her for quite some time before she was really ready to be examined.”

The United States is currently experiencing a nationwide shortage of sexual assault nurse examiners, known as SANEs.

In Virginia, only 16 of 122 licensed hospitals provide sexual assault forensic exams, and only about 150 of the state’s 94,000 registered nurses are credentialed forensic nurses, according to a 2019 study by the Virginia Joint Commission on Health Care.

Many other states also fall short. A 2016 study of six selected states by the U.S. Government Accountability Office showed that the number of forensic nurses did not meet the need for exams, particularly in rural areas.

Leah Griffin was turned away by a hospital in Seattle after being raped in 2014.

“I told them what happened, and they shrugged their shoulders and said, ‘We don’t do rape kits here,'” Griffin said.

Hospital staff offered to transfer her to another hospital by ambulance, at her own expense. She said she was stunned, traumatized and still feeling the effects of a drug given to her by her attacker, so she went home. The next day, she drove herself to the second hospital, about 30 minutes away.

There, she was seen by a trained examiner. But the delay in getting the rape kit done was later cited by prosecutors as a factor that contributed to their decision not to bring criminal charges.

“You watch the crime shows on TV and you think you know exactly what to do if something like that ever happened,” Griffin said. “It never occurred to me that hospitals wouldn’t be equipped to collect evidence.”

Newsletter

Today's breaking news and more in your inbox

I'm interested in (please check all that apply)
Are you a paying subscriber to the newspaper? *
   

Starting at $2.99/week.

Subscribe Today