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5.07.03
As
National Nurses Week Begins, Massachusetts Nurses Association Membership
Reaches All-Time High, More than 22,000 Registered Nurses and Health
Professionals Belong
CANTON,
Mass.—As nurses seek to improve staffing ratios, working
conditions and to achieve fair pay and benefits as a means of improving
patient care in the Commonwealth, a growing number are turning to the
Massachusetts Nurses Association as a vehicle for nursing and patient
advocacy. This month, membership in the Massachusetts Nurses Association,
which is both the professional association for registered nurses and
the states largest union for registered nurses, topped 22,000, the highest
membership count in the association's 100-year history.
Membership
in the MNA, which reached a high in the early 1990s of just over 20,000
members, dipped below 20,000 for most of the 90s, but has surged in
recent years as the organization has gained stature and visibility as
a powerful voice for nurses through successful public policy initiatives
on Beacon Hill and through high-profile union contract efforts. In the
past year, the MNA has seen a 10 percent increase in its membership,
with the new membership equally split between union and non-union nurses.
For the
last 10 years, the MNA has been the leading voice in the nursing community
on public policy issues related to patient safety, access to quality
health care for all residents, the protection of health care facilities
from closure and, most important of all for nurses, legislation that
would regulate how many patients are to be assigned to a nurse.
More and
more nurses are joining the MNA because they understand that we are
the voice for nurses on issues most important to them, which are issues
that deal with their ability to provide safe, high quality patient care,
said Karen Higgins, RN, president of the MNA since 2001, and a key force
behind the MNA's success. Nurses know the MNA is not afraid to stand
up to the health care industry and the insurance industry to make sure
that their voice is heard and that the needs of their patients are being
adequately addressed.
On the
policy front, the MNA has become a powerful force on Beacon Hill, winning
passage of numerous pieces of legislation in the last five years, including
a bill to mandate identification of licensed health care workers to
ensure patients know who is providing their care, a law providing whistle
blower protection for nurses and other health professionals in reporting
unsafe patient care conditions to appropriate authorities; and the MNA
led the effort to pass a law to require the use of safe needle systems
in hospitals to prevent needlesticks and HIV infection of health care
workers. The organization also played a role in helping to pass legislation
regulating drive-thru deliveries and landmark legislation granting consumers
a patients bill of rights under managed care.
The most
important initiative for nurses and the MNA, and the issue that has
mobilized the nursing community behind the organization, has been a
push to improve patient care, protect patients and address the nursing
shortage by passing a law to regulate RN-to-patient ratios in Massachusetts
hospitals. The bill filed by the MNA, H. 1282, An Act Ensuring Quality
Patient Care and Safe Registered Nurse Staffing, has already garnered
101 legislative sponsors and has been endorsed by more than 55 consumer
and health care advocacy organizations.
Nurses
Turn to MNA Union for Protection
The MNA
made headlines throughout the late 1990s for its efforts on behalf of
unionized nurses to address issues of safe staffing, mandatory overtime
and to prevent the replacement of nurses with unlicensed personnel,
all of which are strategies the hospital industry employed as a means
of cutting costs by cutting back on the publics access to nursing care.
These efforts
garnered national attention in 2000 and 2001 with widely publicized
strikes by MNA nurses at St. Vincent Hospital in Worcester and Brockton
Hospital over the issue of RN staffing conditions and the use of mandatory
overtime. In both cases, the strikes ended in the nurses favor, resulting
in groundbreaking contract language to prohibit mandatory overtime and
to require the hospitals to provide better staffing conditions.
MNA now
represents nurses for collective bargaining in 85 different health care
facilities, including representing the nurses at 51 of the 76 acute
care hospitals in the state, which makes the MNA a leader in the nation
in union penetration, with 65 percent of hospital nurses represented
by the MNA, and 25 percent of the total nursing population in the state.
Throughout
the late 1990s, the MNA's success as a union helped generate a boom
in union organizing for nurses in the state with the MNA. Between 1997
and 2000, the MNA organized a total of seven hospitals, three VNAs and
four school nursing units, totaling more than 2,800 nurses under the
MNA union umbrella.
During
the same time period in 2000, the MNA also made a historic and controversial
decision to disaffiliate from its national organization, the American
Nurses Association. The MNA believed the ANA had become too conservative
in its policies and positions and was failing to adequately represent
the interests of front-line nurses, who comprise the vast majority of
the MNA membership.
On March
24, 2000, more than 2,400 nurses flocked to Mechanics Hall in Worcester
to cast a historic vote to split from the ANA, with 83 percent supporting
the measure. This was the largest gathering of registered nurses in
one location ever assembled in the state.
The move to disaffiliate
was a defining moment for the MNA, providing the organization with greater
resources and a clear focus on a core mission to protect and promote
the interests of front-line registered nurses and their patients. In
2001, the MNA joined with other like-minded organizations to form a
new national organization, the American Association of Registered Nurses,
collectively representing more than 80,000 nurses.
###
Founded
in 1903, the Massachusetts Nurses Association (MNA) is the largest professional
health care association and the largest union of registered nurses in
the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Its 22,000 members comprise every
role and area of nursing practice, working in more than 85 different
health care facilities across the state, ranging from large metropolitan
hospitals to community hospitals to visiting nurse associations. The
MNA's membership includes registered nurses in acute care, rehabilitation,
long term care and mental health care, as well as school nurses, public
health nurses, nurse practitioners, nurse midwives, nursing educators,
nursing administrators and researchers. In the public sector, MNA represents
more than 2,000 health professionals (which includes physicians, psychiatrists,
occupational therapists, etc.) working in the state departments of mental
health, public health, mental retardation and social services.
Serving as a voice
for the nursing profession, the MNA works to advance nursing and health
care by fostering high standards of nursing practice, promoting the
economic and general welfare of nurses in the workplace, projecting
a positive and realistic view of nursing, and by lobbying the Legislature
and regulatory agencies on health care issues affecting nurses and the
public.
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