Imposter nurse may have been cross-dressing man
11.30am Sunday October
22, 2006
The bogus nurse who
stalked hospital wards in Christchurch and made off with a health board car may
have been a cross-dresser.
Police were today
continuing to search for the imposter.
Information from the
public suggested the nurse may not have been a woman as assumed, but a man
dressed as a woman, a police spokesman said this morning.
The bogus nurse
masqueraded as a registered nurse and Maori health worker after obtaining a
Canterbury District Health Board (CDHB) photo ID.
National's health
spokesman Tony Ryall is calling for an urgent inquiry into the incident.
"There needs to
be an independent investigation quite urgently into the security arrangements
at the Canterbury hospitals," he said.
"It is incredibly
serious that an imposter can get a security-cleared ID card to be a nurse to
roam free through the hospital and have the opportunity to provide treatment
and care of patients," he said.
It is understood the
"nurse" spent time on wards at Princess Margaret and Christchurch
hospitals, and possibly Hillmorton Hospital, and on occasion took board cars
out for drives before eventually taking a late-model Hyundai Tucson
four-wheel-drive and not returning.
The board refused to
comment on the case.
Nursing Council chief
executive Marion Clark said she was very concerned, as impersonating a nurse
was "highly dangerous".
However, it was not
known whether the imposter had provided any patient care.
Ms Clark said even if
bogus nurse had not, there had still been a breach of the Health Practitioners
Competence Assurance Act.
Police appealed to
members of the public who may have seen the silver Hyundai Tucson 4WD, to call
them.
- NZPA