This case shows a pattern of boundary crossings and violations. Ultimately this situation is sexual abuse. Sexual abuse occurs when there is a concurrent therapeutic relationship and sexual relationship between a nurse and patient. It is also sexual abuse, if a sexual relationship between a nurse and a patient occurs within the year after the therapeutic relationship ends.
Mary is a patient of Ji’s. Even though Mary consented to a sexual relationship, this consent is irrelevant. Ji missed repeated opportunities to re-establish appropriate boundaries with Mary. Instead, Ji let Mary continue to express her feelings through email or by phone after office hours. Each time Mary did so, Ji should have paused, reflected and put a stop to Mary’s advances. If Ji couldn’t or if the nurse-patient relationship was no longer tenable, she should have supported Mary finding another health care provider who could care for her in accordance with CNO’s Therapeutic Nurse-Patient Relationship standard.
CNO has a legal obligation to follow-up on every complaint it receives. Mary’s complaint about Ji was in regards to prescribing practices and not sexual abuse. However, Ji’s relationship with Mary would likely result in an investigation of sexual abuse being brought against Ji. If found guilty of sexually abuse, Ji could have her CNO certificate of registration revoked. This is because sexual abuse occurs when a nurse engages in sexual relations with a patient, touches a patient in a sexual way and/or engages in behaviour or makes remarks that are sexual in nature. It doesn’t matter that the sexual relationship was consensual, nor does it matter who initiated it.