My first reactions to this is that as suspected, that video should never have happened.
Secondly, I fully believe she had never been trained in ebola care. With the exception of the four specifically dedicated units, I doubt any US nurses had been trained for care of a disease which had never ever been seen on US soil.
BUT: for her to say she had "never" had any training at all for any contagious disease is ridiculous. If that's the case, she had no business working as a nurse in an ICU. We all get education and training on various precautions in nursing school, as well as in the course of working as a nurse. I find it next to impossible to believe she had no training whatsoever in infectious disease, yet touts herself as an accomplished ICU nurse. Nurses in Texas are required to get continuing education to keep our licenses. She should have sought out classes for this if she felt inept. Our continuing education is our responsibility to obtain, not the hospitals', though most hospitals will provide opportunities to get their CE's on campus. This sounds like lawyer talk to me.
Lastly, the lawsuit almost implies that nurses in general are asked to volunteer to take patients, or that they regularly have the option to refuse to care for various patients. When you work as a nurse, you are given a patient assignment. You do NOT get to say "Well, I'm sorry. I don't take care of AIDS patients because I'm afraid I might get a needle stick." When you arrive in the ICU for your shift, you do not have the notion that you will be deciding who you will or will not care for.
In this instance, ebola was a totally different animal, and a nurse could have conceivably asked for a Safe Harbor exemption due to the fact that she felt it was out of her scope and knowledge. Occasionally I would be floated to the open heart ICU. I had no experience with a fresh heart, so I would have had a huge problem with being assigned such a complicated patient. It never happened, of course, because my hospital didn't do that and was always just thrilled to have the extra body, so they only gave me day 2 post op patients. In this situation, however, there was not a nurse in the entire hospital who would have had ebola experience.
I just don't like the implication here that hospitals who don't ask their nurses permission before making assignments are doing anything wrong or out of the ordinary.