Alice Minch R.N. AZBN.GOV

Daily writing prompt
Describe one simple thing you do that brings joy to your life.

Writing about people’s lives when they are gone is one of my favorite things to enjoy.

Alice passed recently after being forced into retirement from being an R.N. for many years. She began her nursing when in her youth in Michigan to studying for R.N. and remained at the bedside steadily for 20 yrs before coming to Sun City near Phoenix. She worked repeatedly throughout the U.S. leaving no trace of clinical issues until she came to Yuma for work.

I was close to Alice from our equal exchanges r/t complaints filed against both of our licenses . She was living in apt owned by Yuma Regional whose low life mangements pissed Alice right off. The Alice I knew was easily upset when safety issues should be noted. That one day when Alice stumbled over the apt. supervisor’s husband, whilst husband sitting at complex swimming pool, w/shotgun in hand; her life would change forever.

Alice was a socially trained nurse whose profession carried her to make opinions from socially acquired events such as sitting in a quasi public location with a shotgun. No details of these Yuma General Hosp events are ever pt. related. Continued events in the case evolve to multiple adm law cases as well as civil hearings w/adjudication for her license revocation. Her failures covering 6yrs of filings and hearings reveal connections b/w groups of maliciousness that is well documented whose exposure to that nursing of AZ being already digitally formated for publishing.

Alice was a very passionate person and was argumentative with many. Her searches lead to many discoveries of purjuries that meant little or nothing to Bd, and to a point having a witness identity as an R.N. but oops not so fast. Alice opened the door to common sense of the social nurse and her path revealed what government can do in their path to spend their nonclinical agenda dollars on nonclinical issues.The case is the corner stone in the loss of nursing in AZ. However, the state of nursing today can also be covid catalystic for an industry just ready to break as this case so clearly demonstrates. Alice Minch R.N. R.I.P.