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09.07.2005
800 Days without a Contract
Massachusetts' most vulnerable patients
are threatened by Gov. Romney's disrespect of the state’s
RNs and health professionals
CANTON,
MA—Today, September 7, 2005, marks
800 days that state-employed registered nurses and health professionals
have
gone without a contract, a situation that is preventing the recruitment
and retention of the professional staff needed to adequately
care for the state’s most vulnerable residents, including
the severely mentally ill, mentally retarded and disabled veterans.
The Romney administration refuses to make Unit 7 jobs competitive
with the private sector despite what their own people are telling
them and they continue to drag their feet and won't agree to
even
negotiate until some time in October.
“Governor Romney—while traveling the
country to curry favor with voters in his bid for the White House—has
abandoned this state’s
responsibility to care for its most vulnerable residents,” said
Bill Fyfe, RN and president of the Massachusetts Nurses Association’s
chapter of state-employed health care professionals, which includes
more than 1,800 members. “He has shown a total disrespect
for those dedicated professionals who have sacrificed so much to
care for them.”
State-employed health professionals include registered
nurses, physicians, pharmacists, psychologists, occupational
therapists,
physical therapists, dentists, speech and hearing therapists and
podiatrists. They work in soldiers’ homes for disabled veterans;
state hospitals for the mentally ill; residential facilities for
mentally retarded adults. They also work at centers for HIV and
drug-affected mothers and children; group homes for those cannot
live independently; and high-security wards for violent adolescents
or suicidal/homicidal residents, mentally ill prisoners, and clients
sent for pre-trial evaluations.
“We are the safety net for the state’s most troubled
and helpless citizens, we’re the last stop, and without our
care and services, many of these people would end up homeless and
many would die,” said Fyfe. “The Governor’s treatment
of the state’s caregivers represents the shredding of the
state’s safety net. We will not allow him to continue his
campaign for personal gain without waging our own campaign for
respect and decency for ourselves and for those truly in need.”
Negotiations between the Romney administration
and the health professionals began on July 23, 2004. The administration
came to
the table with more than 100 proposals to cut benefits and no pay
increase. The administration has also sought to strip the nurses
and professionals of all their rights to have input on staffing
conditions at the facilities. According to recent surveys, staffing
levels are dangerously low—which severely compromises the quality
and safety of care in the state’s facilities.
“In order to ensure patient safety, compensation and staffing
levels in state facilities must be competitive with the private
sector,” Fyfe explained. “Working conditions at one
state hospital were so bad that the turnover rate was over 80 percent
in a five-year period. Patients are not safe under these conditions,
and these conditions also make it extremely difficult to recruit
and retain qualified staff.”
Poor Care Statewide Due to Staffing Shortages
The MNA's claims of poor care are supported by hundreds of official
reports of unsafe staffing submitted by professionals at a number
of the state's facilities in recent years. This includes the
results of recent surveys of staff in a number of state facilities
for the mentally ill and mentally retarded. Surveys at two of
the state’s largest mental health hospitals, Taunton State
Hospital (TSH) and Worcester State Hospital (WSH) had the following
alarming results:
- 97 percent of the professional staff at
TSH and 96 percent of the staff at WSH reported that their units
were dangerously
understaffed some or most of the time.
- 95 percent of the staff at TSH and 89 percent
of the staff at WSH reported that staffing levels have been chronically
inadequate
for the past two years.
- 89 percent of the TSH professionals and 77 percent of the WSH
staff believe current working conditions force them to provide
a level of care below their professional standards.
- 100 percent of the TSH professionals and
81 percent of the WSH professionals reported they lack the sufficient
time to
prove the level of care their patients require.
Survey results were even more alarming for two
residential facilities that specialize in the care of the profoundly
mentally retarded—Wrentham
Developmental Center and Templeton Developmental Center.
- 100 percent of the registered nurses and
professionals at Templeton and 69 percent of registered nurses
and professionals
at Wrentham believe their facility is dangerously understaffed
some or most of the time.
- 89 percent of the staff at Wrentham and
80 percent of the staff at Templeton reported an increase in
medical errors due
to understaffing.
- 89 percent of the Wrentham professionals
and 75 percent of the Templeton professionals reported that current
working conditions
force them to provide a level of care below their professional
standards.
- And in both surveys, nearly 75 percent
of the professionals report they are seriously considering leaving.
“We can no longer allow people with severe mental illness
and disability to continue to receive a diminished level of care
in an under-funded system,” Fyfe concluded. “It is
our ethical and professional obligation to advocate for our patients
and that is what we intend to do.”
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