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06.08.05
UMass Memorial Campus RNs Will Hold Informational
Picket Over Patient Safety and Pay Equality
Safe Staffing Ratios for Patients in Critical Care Units a Key
Area of Concern
[View the Photos]
Worcester—Registered nurses (RNs) on the UMass Memorial
Medical Center-Memorial Campus will conduct informational picketing
outside the entrance to the facility today from 2-6 p.m. in an
effort to draw public attention to key issues disputed in their
stalled contract talks with management. The nurses believe the
issues impact their ability to continue to provide safe care for
their patients and the hospital's ability to retain and recruit
experienced staff.
The 900 nurses at Memorial Campus who are represented by the Massachusetts
Nurses Association have been negotiating a new contract since September
2004, with 28 all-day sessions held to date.
Specific issues in dispute include the nurses' desire to
set safe staffing levels in the hospital's critical care
units; pay parity for the Home Health and Hospice staff; showing
experienced nurses respect in terms of shift rotation and not moving
them to another shift and then replacing them with an agency or
per diem nurse; and limiting the patient assignment for charge
nurses.
Nurses Seek Safe Ratios for Patients in Critical Care Units
A key issue for the nurses and the patients they care for is the
inadequate RN-to-patient ratios, particularly for nurses caring
for the most critically ill patients. Staffing ratios in the critical
care units at Memorial are among the worst in the state, with nurses
sometimes assigned up to four patients at a time, and this includes
extremely ill infants in the neonatal intensive care unit. The
nurses are seeking a limit of two patients per nurse.
"As always the nursing staff is putting the safety of our
patients as our primary concern. We have a proposal that will ensure
safe staffing in the critical areas including the medical critical
care unit and the neonatal intensive care unit," said Jackie
Brosnihan, RN and chair of the bargaining unit. "It is impossible
for the registered nurses in these areas to provide quality care
to their critically ill patients if their assignments are not limited."
The nurses' position on the issue is supported
by all the latest research, including a groundbreaking report
by the prestigious
Institute of Medicine of the National Academies of Science, which
recommends that critical care nurses never be assigned more than
two patients. For the care of infants, a recent study published
by the journal Pediatric Critical Care Medicine found a direct
link between RN-to-patient ratios and serious complications in
pediatric intensive care units.
The study concluded that pediatric patients are more likely to
experience complications when the nurse had two patients instead
of one. Other recent studies have cited different problems related
to the RN-to-patient ratio. One study found that newborns die more
often at night in hospitals, which the authors partially attributed
to poor RN staffing on the night shift.
Charge Nurse Assignment
The RNs have put forth a proposal that would further guarantee
patient safety by limiting the patient assignment for a nurse who
is acting as charge nurse. The charge nurse on any unit has the
responsibility for everything that happens on that unit. They make
patient assignments; oversee the care; handle all emergencies;
and make sure all the orders are carried out. The nurses are proposing
that the charge nurse have a 50 percent patient assignment.
Pay Parity for the Home Health and Hospice Staff
The RNs that work in Home Health and Hospice are
caring for patients in the home who, today, are much sicker and
require more sophisticated
care. While hospital stays have been shortened, the care that was
delivered in the hospital is now being performed in the patients' home.
These nurses work in very stressful and sometimes dangerous situations.
These nurses are an important part of the continuity of care provided
by UMMMC and they should be placed on the hospital pay scale.
Setting Guidelines for Reasonable Rotation
The RNs feel this is a simple issue of respect. Over the years
the nurses have accepted that they will do some rotation off their
regular shift. Now the administration is proposing much more widespread
rotations. The nurses feel this would adversely affect not only
patient safety but the health of the nurses.
According to Brosnihan, many of the RNs at Memorial
need two incomes to manage their households—and several are required
to work a second job as a result. "These nurses feel the immediate
effects of a last minute rotation," added Brosnihan. "They
struggle to manage everything from second jobs to day care arrangements
when this happens." Older nurses also struggle in this situation,
and many of them find it difficult to rebound after an unexpected
rotation to an off shift. "We want a guarantee that if we're
rotated to another shift, the hospital will not then turn around
and replace us with a per diem nurse or a nurse working extra hours,"
said
Brosnihan.
According to Lynne Starbard, vice chair of the
bargaining unit, the RNs are looking forward to getting back
to what is important
to them, "We're looking toward a successful conclusion
to these negotiations. The issues are very important to our patients
and we want to get back to what we do best, providing quality nursing
care to our patients."
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