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MASSACHUSETTS NURSE NEWSLETTER ::
October 2006
Survey says that hospitals put patients last
As the Massachusetts Hospital Association prepared
to launch a two-day conference in September in order to trumpet
its “Patients First” public relations campaign, the
MNA released the preliminary results of the only real-time survey
of actual hospital staffing performance—and it found that
hospitals regularly violate their own published staffing plans.
The survey—which is a follow up to a similar analysis completed
in 2004—found that staffing levels in the state’s acute
care hospitals remained unchanged over the last two years, despite
the hospital industry’s claims to be improving the quality
and safety of nursing care.
Survey highlights include:
- There was no statistically significant difference in hospital
staffing levels on medical/surgical units between the 2004 and
2006 surveys.
- Extreme ranges in the number of patients assigned to registered
nurses.
- More than half of the hospitals reported regularly assigning
more than five patients per nurse on the medical/surgical floor,
in excess of the current limit set by regulations in California.
- Every hospital reported an assignment of more than four patients
per nurse on the medical/surgical floor. A study in the Journal
of the American Medical Association finds that for each patient
over four assigned to an RN there is a 7 percent increase in risk
of injury, harm and death to patients.
- In a shocking 36 percent of observations hospitals failed to
meet the accepted minimum standard of no more than two patients
per nurse in the intensive care unit, a standard recommended by
the Institute of Medicine.
- Most alarming of all, more than 45 percent of hospitals had,
on occasion, assigned eight patients or more to their nurses,
a staffing level that according to research published in Journal
of the American Medical Association, placed those patients at
a 31 percent increased risk of death.
“This survey, which is the only study to track
what really is actually happening with nurse staffing in our hospitals,
shows once and for all that the hospital’s ‘Patients
First’ initiative is a farce, providing patients with a false
promise of patient safety, and that the hospital’s actual
staffing practices are oftentimes patently dangerous and irresponsible,”
said Beth Piknick, RN, president of the MNA. “The fact that
there is so much variation in hospital staffing levels and the fact
that they are incapable of adhering to their own self-created plans
is the best argument for legislation creating enforceable safe limits
on the number of patients assigned to an RN.”
Piknick noted, “The MHA Web site is not based on any research
or standard of care; it’s the hospitals self-imposed plan
and ironically one they don't even follow.”
The staffing survey was conducted by the MNA, in conjunction with
Andover Economics, a leading health care economics research firm.
The survey was conducted April 4 – 21, 2006, and employed
a random sample of 65 medical/surgical floors and 52 intensive care
units in 35 of the state’s 67 acute care hospitals. The survey,
which included random sampling of all shifts and all days of the
week, tracked the actual RN-to-patient ratios, with nearly 1,000
individual shifts observed. It is the only real-time survey of hospital
staffing and actual RN patient assignments ever conducted.
The MNA is concerned that the hospital association and others in
the nursing field are treating the Patients First staffing numbers
as if they represent the actual staffing patterns in Massachusetts
hospitals. In fact, the MHA is promoting a research study published
in the September issue of the Journal of Nursing Administration,
which purported to present a scientific analysis of staffing in
Massachusetts hospitals based on the staffing patterns promised
on the Patients First Web site.
A random sampling of hospitals by the MNA analyzing the actual RN
staffing levels and census data with the Patients First Web site
for those hospital units, found the patient census matched only
6 percent of the time while the actual RN staffing matched only
15 percent of the time. This again reaffirms that the Web site has
little relationship to the reality that patients face when they
are admitted to the hospital.
“We will not allow the MHA and its surrogates to use false
data and misinformation to cloud an issue of such great importance
to the safety of patients in our hospitals,” Piknick said.
“The only conclusion that can be reached from any honest look
at the staffing patterns in our hospitals is that, left unregulated,
they vary from facility to facility and there is no guarantee of
any expected level of safety for any patient under current conditions.
Clearly, continued self policing has generated a public relations
campaign and a Web site, but no substantive change for patients
or the front-line nurses who care for them. The only way we can
make that happen is through legislation to actually hold hospitals
accountable.”
The release of these preliminary survey results were part of a larger
study on RN staffing in Massachusetts hospitals and the cost of
implementing safer staffing standards. Andover Economics intends
to release in October.
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