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Massachusetts Nurse :: September
2005
New study finds RN-to-patient ratios a
cost effective measure for saving lives, improving safety
According to a new study published in the August
issue of the Journal Medical Care, the official medical journal
of the American Public Health Association, implementing RN-to-patient
ratios could save thousands of lives at a reasonable cost.
The study, the first to look at the cost effectiveness of specific
RN-to-patient ratios in hospitals, found the cost of reducing a
nurse's patient load to just four patients, which is the recommended
standard for medical/surgical floors in pending national and state
legislation, is less costly than a number of other basic safety
interventions now commonly used in hospitals, including the cost
of conducting PAP tests for cervical cancer and clot-busting medications
to treat heart attacks. If an RN-to-patient ratio of 4-to-1 was
implemented nationally, the researchers estimate as many as 72,000
lives could be saved annually.
The study was conducted in response to numerous studies that show
a direct link between poor RN-to-patient ratios and poor outcomes
for patients, as well as the ongoing debate regarding legislation—passed
in California and pending in Massachusetts—to regulate specific
RN-to-patient ratios in hospitals. According to lead researcher
on the project, Michael B. Rothberg, MD, MPH, an assistant professor
of medicine at Tufts University and a physician with the Division
of General Medicine and Geriatrics at Baystate Medical Center in
Springfield, Mass., “We wanted to test our hypothesis that improved
patient outcomes from lower ratios would cost less than many other
commonly accepted safety measures. Our study bore that out.”
“Considered as a patient safety intervention, improved nurse staffing
has a cost-effectiveness that falls comfortably within the range
of other widely accepted interventions,” the study's authors concluded.
“If a hospital decided for economic reasons not to provide thrombolytic
therapy (blood thinning medications) in acute myocardial infarction,
physicians would likely refuse to admit to that hospital and patients
would fear to go there. Physicians, hospital administrators and
the public must now begin to see safe nurse staffing levels in the
same light as other patient safety measures.”
While the researchers found that improving ratios costs more money
in labor costs, nearly half of those dollars would be recouped in
savings from the reduced length of patients' hospital stays. More
importantly, the lower the number of patients assigned to a nurse,
the more lives that would be saved.
The study analyzed the cost-effectiveness of patient-to-nurse ratios
ranging from 8-to-1 to 4-to-1, using a measurement of the costs
per life saved in 2003 dollars. The cost estimates were drawn from
medical literature and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Patient mortality
and length of stay data for different ratios were based on two large
hospital-level studies, including a study in the Journal of the
American Medical Association conducted by researchers at the University
of Pennsylvania School of Nursing. The study, which evaluated the
care of more than 232,000 surgical patients treated in Pennsylvania
hospitals found every patient in addition to four assigned to a
nurse resulted in a 7 percent increase in the risk of death for
each patient.
“We found that improving ratios from 8-to- 1 to 4-to-1 at a cost
of $136,000 per life saved was more expensive than testing for HIV
infection, which costs $22,000 per life saved, yet was significantly
less costly than administering clot busting medications which costs
$182,000 per life saved, or conducting routine PAP tests which costs
$432,000 per life saved,” Rothberg explained.
“This new study strongly validates our position in this debate and
argues for passage of legislation to regulate a safe standard of
care for all Massachusetts patients in the form of RN-to-patient
ratios,” said Karen Higgins, RN and president of the Massachusetts
Nurses Association. “It clearly shows that an investment in improved
ratios as we are proposing is consistent with other widely accepted
safety measures, it costs less than those measures, and most important
of all, it will save many, many lives.”
Rothberg, a physician himself, believes physicians are an important
audience for his findings as his study clearly demonstrates the
important value good RN staffing has on the safety of their patients.
“Physicians would go ballistic if a hospital attempted to remove
a preferred medication from their formulary, yet they don't blink
an eye when staffing levels are cut and have the same negative impact
on the safety of their patients. They don't see staffing as their
responsibility in the same way they view the drugs they prescribe
or the equipment they use.”
The new study appears at a time when the Massachusetts Legislature
is debating competing versions of legislation to improve patient
safety in Massachusetts hospitals. The Massachusetts Nurses Association,
along with a coalition of 91 leading health care and consumer groups
is promoting H.2663, legislation that would establish safe, minimum
RN-to-patient ratios in Massachusetts’ acute care hospitals. The
Massachusetts Hospital Association is proposing a bill that allows
hospitals to continue to set their own staffing levels and report
those levels to the Department of Public Health.
A hearing on the two nursing bills was held in July before the Joint
Committee on Public Health, which is considering both. While Rothberg
did not take a side on the issue of RN-to-patient ratio legislation,
he believes hospital administrators should take a hard look at the
cost effectiveness of better ratios. The study highlights the debate
over ratios that came before the passage of a law to regulate ratios
in California, where the nurses' association was recommending a
medical surgical ratio of 3-to-1 and the hospital industry wanted
it to be 10-to-1. The state eventually settled on a ratio of 5-to-1
to be phased in over two years. Kaiser Permanente, the largest hospital
chain in the state, voluntarily chose a 4-to-1 ratio, the same as
what is proposed in the Massachusetts ratio bill. According to the
Rothberg, “Based on our analysis, Kaiser's choice seems a cost effective
one.”
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