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9.04.03
Mass
BORN Joins MNA in Questioning Role of Paramedics in ICUs and ERs
As the
hospital industry attempts to deal with a shortage of nurses who are
willing to work at the hospital bedside in Massachusetts, the Massachusetts
Nurses Association has been on the lookout for the implementation of
management strategies that attempt to deal with the shortage by replacing
or substituting registered nurses with lesser qualified, unlicensed
personnel. Such practices have been utilized in previous shortages with
disastrous results, and in a number of reports and studies, such practices
are cited as a cause of the current shortage we now face.
Last month,
the Massachusetts Nurses Association sought and obtained a written opinion
from the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Nursing regarding just
such dangerous and misguided policies being implemented by the three
Massachusetts hospitals that call for expanding the use of paramedics
inside of hospitals to substitute for nurses in both intensive care
units and emergency rooms.
The advisory
from the BORN provides important guidance to nurses and nurse administrators
that prohibits any delegation of nursing duties or tasks that require
the judgement and assessment of a registered nurse to paramedics in
the hospital setting. In the ICU, it is clear from the BORN advisory
that paramedics cannot function beyond the scope of a typical PCA or
nurses' aide. In the emergency department, if a paramedic is to perform
any duties beyond the PCA role, they can only do so under the direction
and supervision of an MD. No nurse or nurse manager can delegate registered
nursing duties of any kind to a paramedic without being in violation
of the Board of Registration's nurse practice act.
The MNA
sought the ruling by the BORN after it learned of a program being implemented
at the MetroWest Medical Center, a hospital owned by for-profit Tenet
Corporation in Natick, which called for the use of paramedics in the
intensive care unit to perform a variety of functions that are the exclusive
purview of the registered nurse. During the same time period, the MNA
was alerted to a similar programs utilizing paramedics to assume nursing
functions in emergency departments at Lawrence General Hospital. The
MNA is also clarifying the use of paramedics in the emergency department
at Merrimack Valley Hospital in Haverhill.
At MetorWest
Medical Center, management created and filled positions with the title,
"ICU Paramedic." Under the supervision of the unit's nursing management,
the position job description clearly states that the ICU paramedics
contribute to the "assessment, planning, implementing and evaluation
of patient care."
The ICU
Paramedic job description includes a number of functions that the MNA
believed clearly fall only to RNs to perform, including: auscultation
of breath sounds, heart sounds, initiation of oxygen therapy, analysis
of cardiac rhythms and monitoring patients with Swan Ganz catheter;
chest tubes; or cardioversion and sunctioning of patients.
The letter
to the MNA from the BORN's Nursing Practice Coordinator Gino Gisari,
MSN, RN, stated that none of these activities comply with the Board's
criteria for delegation. If a nurse were to follow the hospital's job
description and delegate these tasks to one of the ICU paramedics, according
to this ruling, he or she would be violating the Nurse Practice Act.
The MNA
also asked for clarification as to the responsibility of nurse managers
in allowing or sanctioning this level of delegation. The Board's response
was again quite clear. The ruling states, "The regulations governing
licensed nurses are the same regardless of job title or employment setting."
According
to Dorothy McCabe, MNA Director of Nursing who initiated the discussion
with the BORN on this issue, "There is no ambiguity here, this job description,
as written, is in direct violation of the nurse practice act. Any nurse
manager who participates in supervising paramedics in performing at
this level, and any nurse who allows a paramedic to perform these tasks
on their patients, is in direct opposition to and in conflict with the
Board of Registration's position on delegation."
In another
case, nurses at Merrimack Valley Hospital raised concerns to the MNA
and with management when a paramedic assigned to the emergency department
transported a patient to the ICU and proceeded to give a nurse orders
for that patient. The nurse wisely refused to accept the orders from
a paramedic and insisted that she would only take orders from a physician.
Based on
the BORN letter to MNA and on subsequent conversations with offcials
at the BORN, it is clear that the nurse acted accordingly. If and when
a paramedic is working in an emergency room, they can only work under
the supervision of the physician. If a paramedic works with a nurse,
he or she can only function at the level of a PCA or traditional nurses
aide.
At Lawrence
General Hospital, the MNA local bargaining unit became involved in the
issue when the husband of one of the nurses, himself an EMT, became
alarmed upon bringing a patient into the hospital's emergency room only
to be greeted by a paramedic who wanted to admit the patient. The EMT
refused, stating that he would and could only turn his patient over
to an RN. A nurse manager stepped in and allowed the paramedic to admit
the patient. Again, this is in violation of the Nurse Practice Act and
JCAHO standards, as it is only a nurse who can admit and take a history
of a patient in a hospital setting.
"We became
alarmed to see a pattern of behavior that signaled to us that the hospital
industry was once again responding to a shortage of nurses by seeking
to implement strategies that called for the replacement or substitution
of RNs by lesser qualified, cheaper substitutes—in this case,
paramedics," said Karen Higgins, RN, president of MNA. "We have been
down this road before, during the 80s and throughout the 1990s and it
was disastrous for both nurses and for patients. In fact, these policies
are what created the current shortage. We have nothing against EMTs
and paramedics. They serve a valuable role in providing pre-hospital
care. But they are not and cannot function as a registered nurse."
The MNA's
position is supported by a number of studies, including two recent studies
published in the New England Journal of Medicine and the Journal of
American Medical Association, which both found that when there is a
skill mix with fewer RNs, the quality and safety of care is negatively
impacted.
"The bottom
line is, if you want to provide safe, quality patient care, there is
no substitute for a registered nurse," Higgins said. "Our hats are off
to the Board of Registration in Nursing for reinforcing that concept.
Now it is up to every nurse and nurse manager to stand up for quality
patient care and to not allow misguided administrators to attempt to
destroy nursing practice by handing our practice over to lesser qualified
personnel."
A copy
of the MNA publication "Accepting, Reflecting and Delegating a Work
Assignment: A Guide fro Nurses," can be obtained by calling the
department of nursing at 781.821.4625. A free 1.2 contact-hour program
can be scheduled at your facility by contacting Dorothy McCabe at
781.830.5714 or via e-mail at dmccabe@mnarn.org.
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