Legislative
Nursing Commission says nursing shortage to worsen
By Leslie Miller, Associated Press, 06/19/01
An acute shortage has left overworked and exhausted nurses fearful
of losing their licenses and of being attacked by violent patients, according
to a draft report of the Special Commission on Nursing and Nursing Practice
obtained by The Associated Press.
The
report is the result of hearings by a legislative commission investigating
the nursing shortage and its effect on patient care, which result from cutbacks
in Medicare and Medicaid, managed care, downsizing and restructuring.
"I am so close to being burnt out I am beginning to smolder," Shirley
Webber, a registered nurse, told the commission.
The
report said patients in health-care facilities with nursing shortages risk
inadequate assessment of their conditions, increased infection, medication
errors, skin problems, inadequate pain management and falls.
"It
is the unanimous consensus of licensed nurses, health care personnel and
administrators that the shortage of nursing care in the commonwealth is endangering
the quality of care that our nurses can provide to the patient," the report's
authors wrote.
Nurses
fear violence, especially from psychiatric patients. The report cites a Centers
for Disease Control statistic showing 73 percent of psychiatric nurses have
been assaulted at least once.
One
nurse recounted how she had been attacked by a patient: "My entire face was
ground into the floor. Still blinded, I then felt a blow to the back of my
head. ... I screamed as loudly as I could, but no one was around to help
me," said the nurse, identified only as J.B.
Nurses
fear they will lose their licenses because they make mistakes after they've
been told to work overtime or take care of too many patients.
"Prospective
nurses are aware that their entire career can be scrapped for a mistake made
while deep into the fourteenth or fifteenth hour of their work day," the
report said.
The
shortage of nurses is expected to get worse between 2008 and 2010, the report
said, citing testimony from the Massachusetts Hospital Association.
A
smaller post-Baby Boom generation with more career options to choose from
than older workers is the reason for the declining enrollment in nursing
programs, according to testimony by Lorna R. Prince, president of the Massachusetts
Organization of Nurse Executives.
The
commission recommends finding ways to retain nurses and to recruit new ones
through financial support and improved working conditions. It also recommends
legislation to limit mandatory overtime and establish patient-to-staff ratios.
The
Organization of Nurse Executives opposes legislated staffing ratios because
it will not solve the problem of providing adequate care.
The
commission said the state, which doesn't know how many nurses are licensed
to practice, needs to keep better tabs on the number of nurses.
The
Legislative Nursing Commission on Nursing and Nursing Practice is co-chaired
by Sen. Robert Creedon, and Rep. Christine Canavan, a registered nurse. Both
are Democrats from Brockton, where 435 Brockton Hospital nurses are entering
the fourth week of a strike over the issues addressed in the report.
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