Skip to main content

Khaira, Kirandeep, LPN

Consent agreement

Apr 14, 2025

On April 14, 2025, a panel of the Inquiry Committee approved a consent agreement between BCCNM and Kirandeep Khaira of Surrey to address practice issues that occurred on May 13, 2024, related to the withdrawal of her care of a vulnerable patient and her failure to attend adequately, or at all, to required medication documentation and other nursing duties. 

The conduct was unsatisfactory in respect of the standards set for Licenced Practical Nurses in the areas of:

  1. Documentation
  2. Duty to provide care
  3. Medication
  4. Responsibility and accountability
  5. Knowledge-based practice
  6. Client-focused provision of service
  7. Ethical practice

These standards set expectations that ensure that nurses practice safely, ethically, and responsibly. 

The registrant has voluntarily agreed to terms equivalent to a limit and/or condition on their practice, including: ​

  1. A reprimand and a suspension of their registration for one week
  2. ​Remedial education targeted to address their knowledge gap 

The Inquiry Committee is satisfied that the terms will address the professional and practice concerns that arose and will protect the public.

900 – 200 Granville St
Vancouver, BC  V6C 1S4
Canada

info@bccnm​.ca
604.742.6200​
​Toll-free 1.866.880.7101 (within Canada only) ​


We acknowledge the rights and title of the First Nations on whose collective unceded territories encompass the land base colonially known as British Columbia. We give specific thanks to the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ speaking peoples the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) and sel̓íl̓witulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations and the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh-ulh Sníchim speaking Peoples the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation), on whose unceded territories BCCNM’s office is located. We also give thanks for the medicines of these territories and recognize that laws, governance, and health systems tied to these lands and waters have existed here for over 9000 years.

We also acknowledge the unique and distinct rights, including rights to health and wellness, of First Nations, Inuit​ and Métis peoples from elsewhere in Canada who now live in British Columbia. As leaders in the settler health system, we acknowledge our responsibilities to these rights under international, national, and provincial law.​