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Nurses
in the News!
Today's front-page story in the Globe once again shines a
light on the importance of nurses, the issue of nurse staffing,
the nursing shortage
and what nurses are doing to address this situation. The MNA is proud
of the fact that the Globe chose to focus on one of our unionized hospitals
(New England Medical Center), which has given its nurses significant and
much deserved salary increases. What's more important than the salary
hike, however, is the issue of staffing at this facility. See the underlined
paragraph in the story below and you will notice that NEMC, not only pays
nurses what they are worth, but they provide a nurse to patient ratio of
1 nurse to 4 patients on a typical hospital floor. If every hospital
had this level of staffing, there never would have been a nursing shortage,
and if they instituted such staffing now, the shortage would soon end.
The fact is, most hospitals in the Commonwealth have very poor nurse staffing,
which has driven nurses away from the bedside, and endangered patients.
That is why the MNA along with the Massachusetts Senior Action Council
and others are supporting HB 1186, a Safe Staffing/Safe Patient Care Bill
that would replicate what has happened in California and regulate nurse to
patient ratios for all hospitals, for all nurses and for all patients. For
information on this legislation and how you can help support its passage,
visit the MNA Legislative Agenda page
As their numbers shrink, nurses gain clout
By Anne Barnard, Globe Staff, 2/7/2002
Think of nurses these days, and the image that comes to mind
is as likely to be a frazzled worker with a picket sign as a calm comforter
in white.
But in recent weeks, a different picture has begun to emerge.
From coast to coast, there are signs that the turmoil in nursing and its
attendant publicity have brought nurses a hard-won victory. With hospitals
desperate to hire them and politicians eager to embrace their concerns about
medical errors and emergency-room delays, nurses are now the most sought-after
workers in the health care world, with new, and some say unprecedented, clout.
In Boston, Tufts-New England Medical Center has agreed to raise
nurses' pay 18 to 23 percent over 21 months, a deal the nurses union called
the state's biggest raise in nearly two decades.
In California, Governor Gray Davis has announced the nation's
first state-mandated nurse-to-patient ratios, tentatively set at 1 to 6 on
regular hospital floors and 1 to 1 for trauma and intensive-care patients.
With 10 percent of the nation's nursing jobs empty and one in
seven hospitals reporting a nursing vacancy rate of 20 percent, 41 percent
of hospitals are paying signing bonuses: $5,000 is common, $10,000 not unheard
of.
Even at Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, which
announced 700 layoffs last month to offset a $58 million operating loss last
year, executives went against consultants' advice and vowed not to fire a
single bedside nurse.
''Finally, some hospitals are starting to realize that your survival
depends on having the nurses to staff those beds when the ER patients come
in,'' said Karen Higgins, a nurse at Boston Medical Center who is president
of the Massachusetts Nurses Association, the state's largest nurses union.
Over the last year, unions and other groups have warned that
nurses are increasingly overworked, caring for too many patients, and afraid
that their exhaustion will lead to a lethal mistake.
Given this grim picture, Kate Matulewicz, 26, seems to live in
an alternative universe. At Tufts-New England Medical Center, she cares for
three or four cardiology patients a day, few enough that she has time to
laugh at their jokes about her red hair and to teach them how to take better
care of themselves at home. She never has to work overtime against her will,
and she beams with pride about the research project she recently worked on.
''I'd say I'm happy with both the pay and the benefits,'' she said Friday,
as she whisked from room to room changing bandages and testing blood pressure.
One patient, William Charbonnier, said he ran a home-nursing
agency in St. Croix until last year, when congestive heart failure forced
him to move back to Boston. He said the medical center seemed to have learned
the same lesson he did: ''You need to pay them right and treat them right,
or you're not going to keep them.''
Shelley Reever, who negotiated the hospital's new contract for the union, said she expects that message to spread.
''The nursing shortage is predicted to be so severe, nurses are
going to be in a position to have a huge amount of say over their working
conditions,'' Reever said. ''We're not there yet, but I just see this as
a very different time. The Legislature, the state, the federal government,
everyone is finally starting to listen.''
And so is the marketplace. Newly hired nurses increasingly can
choose their hours. Some hospitals are giving nurse executives more leeway
and more money to make changes that nurses want, from creating new awards
to reducing mandatory overtime.
''The workplace is becoming more attractive,'' said Barbara Monroe, dean of the Boston College School of Nursing.
Word of mouth from disgruntled nurses and new opportunities for
women have dampened interest in the profession in recent years, Monroe said.
But in September, nursing-school enrollment rose 3.7 percent,
ending a six-year slide, according to the American Association of Colleges
of Nursing.
At Northeastern University, applications to the nursing program
are up 70 percent over last year. Enrollment is expected to rise further,
partly because of the sluggish economy. Recessions typically lure people
into nursing, as the profession's comparative stability becomes a selling
point and as higher salaries in other fields lose some of their edge.
But the workplace stresses are far from over, and nurses' recent gains won't solve all the problems.
There are still roughly 21,000 fewer students than in 1995, not
enough to meet the demand for new nurses or stave off a projected shortage
of 500,000 registered nurses by 2020.
And there are limits to how fast the nursing schools can grow:
BC's School of Nursing saw a 40 percent increase in applications this year,
but the number of students who enter next fall will increase by just 10 percent,
Monroe said, because there is not enough faculty to handle more.
Meanwhile, some health care executives fear that too much power
for nurses - and particularly for nurses' unions - could weaken hospitals
financially and thereby harm patients.
Dr. Samuel O. Thier, chief executive of the Partners HealthCare
network, called the New England Medical Center contract ''precedent-breaking.''
He said the deal would add to the pressures on Massachusetts hospitals, already
struggling with Medicaid reimbursement rates that pay just 70 cents on the
dollar.
In California, hospitals are warning that the proposed nurse-to-patient
ratios could be counterproductive. The California Healthcare Association,
an industry group, says that the proposed ratios will cost hospitals an additional
$400 million a year, when 64 percent of hospitals in the state are losing
money.
Hospitals may have to close some beds if they cannot find the
staff required to operate them under the mandate, said Jan Emerson, a spokeswoman
for the group, which represents California's more than 500 hospitals.
A similar ratio bill is being debated in the Massachusetts Legislature.
Proponents cite studies showing that care improves when there are more nurses
per patient; critics say that those studies are inconclusive and that state-mandated
ratios rob hospitals of the flexibility they need.
Nevertheless, there is a broad consensus among health care executives
and politicians that nurses, the most numerous employees in the troubled
health-care system, need a boost. Hospitals and unions alike are thrilled
that Congress and state legislatures are setting aside money for nurse training.
In Boston, hospitals more used to vying over whose doctors are best now compete for the title of most nurse-friendly.
Massachusetts General Hospital, which has long been better known
for its cutting-edge medicine than its warmth, has made nursing a priority
under Jeanette Ives Erickson, its senior vice president for patient care
and chief nurse. MGH also poached top nurse managers last year from its financially
struggling rival, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, in a bid to steal
its title as Boston's premier nursing institution.
Meanwhile, Paul Levy, the new chief executive at Beth Israel
Deaconess, said that protecting nurses was key to the hospital's survival,
even if it costs more in the short term. ''The place that this hospital has
in the community is based on a level of warmth and care that is fundamentally
in the hands of the nurses,'' Levy said.
Emerson Hospital has set aside more time for training and provided refresher courses for nurses returning to work.
''For years, we just accepted the fact that we had more and more
and more patients and there were less of us, and it was getting more dangerous,''
said Higgins of the Massachusetts Nurses Association. ''Finally, nurses are
coming out freely and saying, `It isn't safe.' Nurses probably always had
clout. They just never used it.''
Anne Barnard can be reached by e-mail at abarnard@globe.com
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