Criminal minds odd trivia question 1:
In what season one episode did Penelope Garcia call JJ peaches?
(please reblog with your answer or leave your answer in the comments.)
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Criminal minds odd trivia question 1:
In what season one episode did Penelope Garcia call JJ peaches?
(please reblog with your answer or leave your answer in the comments.)

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why should i worry why should i ca-aa-are
#i cant not picture oliver and company #just with tigers and shit
I can always count on you guys to come through for me.Â
To any of my followers who live in Massachusetts.
Please, I implore you to vote no on Question One. I do not care how many ‘nurses say’ signs you see, any nurse who gives a fraction of thought for patient care quality hates this proposed bill. For those unaware, it would set a statute that only allowed nurses to take a certain small number of patients at any one time.
It would certainly help lazy nurses care for less patients and thus lighten their work load. And who suffers? Everyone else in the health care industry and worst of all, the patients.
Hospitals would likely not hire more staff then necessary, and even if they did it would still not help with the already overclocked scheduling. EMS would not be able to offload patients until another patient left, regardless of empty beds or spots. This means not only longer for potentially critical patients to get needed care but EMS out of service waiting for upwards of 12 to 24 hours until a spot cleared up.
Traumas, massive heart attacks, critical care, infirm, imagine it was -your- loved one who was denied a hospital bed or diverted to a hospital two hours away because nurses can’t take more then a set small number of patients at one time.
Taxes would shoot up to cover costs of new hires and fines, hospital bills would also skyrocket, and hospital stays would shorten because instead of providing quality care people would be focused on booting people out the door asap to free up nurse spots.
This bill would cripple the Mass healthcare system which is one of the best in the nation and for good reason. We all know nurses are overworked and I urge us all to find a proposal that helps them -without- crippling the rest of the system and compromising the wellbeing of the patients we are here to protect, help, and advocate for.
If you live in Massachusetts, please vote no on Q1. Keep the quality of healthcare in our state high, and assure that there is enough resource availability to give care to everyone in need when they need it.