2 more women allege TikTok Doc forced his body against them from behind while at OHSU
Updated Mar 09, 2021;
Posted Mar 08, 2021
“Once Jason Campbell became popular through social media, leaders at OHSU seemed protective of him,” one of the nurses said in her declaration.
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Two more women claim former OHSU Dr. Jason Campbell came up from behind them and forced his body against theirs at work, similar to the conduct a social worker has alleged in a federal lawsuit.
A third woman said Campbell followed her around during his rotation in her unit in 2019, asking her for free hugs.
The three nurses paint a disturbing picture of Campbell, an anesthesiology resident who gained national attention as the so-called TikTok Doc for the viral videos he posted on social media of him dancing in his hospital scrubs.
Nizar Wehbi earned his medical degree in Lithuania and received a master's degree in public health and business administration from the University of Nebraska.
by Bill Kelly & Will Bauer, NET News
March marks the anniversary of the first COVID patient diagnosed in Nebraska
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Bill Kelly & Will Bauer, NET News
March 8, 2021 - 5:30am
March 6 marks one year since the first person in Nebraska tested positive for COVID-19. To remember how this pandemic started in the state, Bill Kelly and Will Bauer report Monday s NET News Signature Story.
BILL KELLY (NET News): We ve both been talking with people who played major roles in the first days when the Coronavirus arrived in Nebraska. That was one year ago this week. The state had already hosted those who had come into contact with the virus when the US government evacuated Americans from China and Japan. They were put under the control of the infectious disease experts at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. But a year ago, the state had its first known case of a lo
As a staff sergeant in the United States Air Force, mom of two and stepmom of three, Dwinese Aird’s role during the pandemic can be summed up in one word, according to her sister: “Superhero.”
For Aird, an independent medical technician who helps oversee anywhere from 30 to 200 patients at a time, the pandemic has been a lot.
Her husband was deployed at the beginning of the pandemic.
“When the kids had to come out of school, it was basically me by myself doing that and trying to navigate work at the same time, the 42-year-old said, and I work with patients, so I couldn’t bring them with me all the time.”
Nizar Wehbi earned his medical degree in Lithuania and received a master's degree in public health and business administration from the University of Nebraska.