
A loose coalition of community leaders has formed in hopes of bringing millions of dollars to Cumberland County to increase the number of sexual assault nurse examiners in the region.
Partly at issue at Thursday nightโs meeting of law enforcement, prosecutors, government officials and nonprofit leaders was Cape Fear Valley Medical Centerโs precipitous drop in the number of SANE nurses in just a few yearsโ time.
โAt some point five years ago, I had 20 SANE nurses,โ said Dr. Michael Zappa, chief clinical officer at Cape Fear Valley Medical Center at the Thursday night meeting. โRight before COVID, I had eight. Iโve got one today.โ
Ideally, he said, Cape Fear Valley, which serves a multicounty region, would need around 20-30 SANE nurses to guarantee sexual assault victims would not have to wait long to be treated. The hospital has the 10th-largest emergency room volume in the country.
A SANE nurse takes dozens of hours of training, not only in how to collect forensic evidence but also in how to react around people who have just endured the most traumatic moment of their lives.
Assistant District Attorney Alicia Flowers said she prosecutes cold-case rapes, and itโs essential to those cases to have a qualified SANE nurse helping victims.
โKnowing the history of SANE nurses has allowed us to put several serial rapists behind bars because of the excellent work SANE nurses have done in our community.โ
SANE nurses should not be optional, said state Rep. Billy Richardson, D-Cumberland.ย
โThis is a crime against the state of North Carolina, not just the victim,โ Richardson said. โItโs the stateโs responsibility to make sure we get this perpetrator off the streets and make people safe.โ
Cape Fear Valley is certainly not alone in needing more SANE nurses. Hospitals nationwide have a shortage of SANE nurses. A Carolina Public Press investigation last year showed that of around 130 hospitals in North Carolina, few in rural areas have even one SANE nurse and many urban areas only had a few.
A groundswell of support for SANE nurses has since blossomed in North Carolina and around the country:
- Around the state, 50 nurses, largely from rural hospitals, started training earlier this year to obtain a SANE certification, thanks to $2 million from the state Attorney Generalโs Office.
- Legislators approved $125,000 for a pilot project in Cumberland County to train SANE nurses. Fayetteville State University, a historically black college, intends to train about 10 nurses to get their SANE certifications under Dr. Sheila Cannon.
- Congress approved $30 million per year for the next several years to train and retain SANE nurses, with a focus on rural and tribal communities. The legislation includes a focus on SANE nurses for child patients.
State Sen. Kirk deViere, D-Cumberland, said heโs asked for $3 million to extend the FSU pilot project to train SANE nurses at Fayetteville State University. Senate Bill 872 is currently in the appropriations process.
โThey have the capacity of their nursing program and can reach across a multicounty area,โ deViere said after the meeting. โAnd we can build the capacity for SANE nurses right here locally.โ
Sustainability?
One question the meeting addressed was whether the plan would be sustainable.ย
โI think itโs sustainable if we make it a priority,โ said Deanne Gerdes, executive director for Rape Crisis Volunteers of Cumberland County.
Once FSUโs program becomes more established, perhaps, some attendees said, the area would be well-poised to qualify for some of the $30 million in federal grants approved through Congress earlier this year.
Nationwide, the SANE nursing shortage is also now compounded by a pandemic-fueled nursing shortage, and some nurses are leaving jobs in their communities to pursue more lucrative travel contracts.
SANE nurses are trained to collect forensic evidence after a sexual assault and help treat victims to prevent sexually transmitted infections. Of those served by a SANE nurse, 72% are more likely to report the crime to law enforcement, studies have shown, compared with half who were served by a nurse without the training.
Aspiring SANE nurses must take dozens of hours of classroom and in-person training and attend clinical work. Finally, to get their credentials, nurses must pass a written exam.
All of that costs time and money โ money to pay to take the exam, money to pay for the training and money to pay for a hotel if the training is outside of their community. Also, nurse trainees need to have the time off from their regular jobs to get the training in the first place.
Cape Fear Valley Medical Center averages one sexual assault victim per day, Zappa said.
โIdeally, Iโd like somebody dedicated (to treating that person),โ he said.
Nurses would likely have to take rotating on-call shifts to ensure service at all hours, Zappa said. At times, hospitals depended on nursesโ goodwill to be available without pay. Thatโs not how it works for other specialties like cardiology or neurology, he said.
โWe are very fortunate in this community to have 30 board-certified cardiologists,โ Zappa said.ย
โWe have an on-call system set up that guarantees the trained person is available and in the right shape and says, โNope, I canโt have a beer and I canโt have a glass of wine. Iโm at the ready and I come in when I get the call.โ โ
Then thereโs the cost of the exam itself to the hospital. The state reimburses hospitals up to $800 for a physician or SANE nurse to conduct an exam, and hospitals are required to accept that money โas payment in full.โ
However, those reimbursement figures are at least a decade old. A bill by Sen. Natasha Marcus, D-Mecklenburg, would nearly double that reimbursement figure.
For years, however, rape victim advocates have said victims are being billed anyway.
โVictims are being billed for the difference, and that shouldnโt happen,โ Marcus said Friday.
Up to legislators
Richardson and state Rep. Edward Goodwin, R-Chowan, introduced legislation last year that would fine hospitals $25,000 per instance if they bill victims for the cost of sexual assault exams.
Marcusโ and deViereโs bills are currently under consideration by the state Senate appropriations/base budget committee but have no Republican sponsors.
Kate Martin is lead investigative reporter for Carolina Public Press. Email her atย kmartin@carolinapublicpress.org.
Carolina Public Pressย is an independent, in-depth and investigative nonprofit news service for North Carolina.

