Family fear nurse who admits killings made loved one ill

HEART disease patient Charlotte Klimko was in and out of a critical care unit for much of last summer after lab results showed unusually high levels of a heart medication in her system.

Family fear nurse who admits killings made loved one ill

Now her family is considering a chilling question: did a former nurse who has confessed to killing up to 40 patients in New Jersey and Pennsylvania have anything to do with making her ill?

“My sisters and I brought her into a medical facility believing it was best for her,” said Klimko’s daughter, Mary Ann Jones. “My worst fear is that something bad might have been done while she was in there that we had no control over.”

The nurse, Charles Cullen, was working at the critical care unit of Somerset Medical Centre in Somerville, New Jersey, at the time Klimko was being treated there.

The medication coursing through the 76-year-old woman’s system was digoxin, the same drug Cullen allegedly used to kill a Church official, who died on June 28 at Somerset.

Mrs Klimko was called back to the hospital twice after test results turned up high levels of digoxin. She died on

October 26 of congestive heart disease, at home.

Ms Jones, 41, said that when she read about Cullen: “I just wanted to let them know that I wanted her file opened and investigated. It just sounded a little suspicious to me.”

Somerset County authorities are looking into Mrs Klimko’s death.

The county prosecutor’s office has had more than two dozen inquiries about former patients in the hospital since the Cullen story broke.

Cullen, 43, is charged with killing Catholic priest Florian J Gall and attempting to kill another patient at Somerset Medical Centre. He is being held on $1 million bail.

Authorities are reviewing patient records, trying to evaluate Cullen’s claims that he administered fatal overdoses of heart medication to seriously ill patients to put them out of their misery. He worked at nine hospitals and a nursing home in a 16-year career.

Dr William Cors, chief medical officer at Somerset Medical Centre, said he understands the families’ concerns.

“I truly, truly empathise with that,” he said.

Hunterdon Medical Centre, in Raritan Township, NJ, has set up a hotline for people concerned their loved ones may have come in contact with Cullen there between 1994 and 1996.

At St Luke’s hospital in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where Cullen worked for two years, about 10 calls had come in by late Tuesday, the day after the allegations were made public, spokeswoman Susan Schantz said.

“We want people to be able to talk with us. If you’re asking me whether we’ve been besieged by calls, the answer is no. Not yet,” said Ms Schantz.

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