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07.23.2007
Yet Another New
Study Links RN Nurse Staffing To An Increase in Patient Infections
and Hospital Costs
Study
Bolsters Case for Increasing RN Staffing in Hospitals
CANTON, Mass.—A new
study published in the July issue of the open access journal
Critical Care finds that understaffing of registered nurses in hospital
intensive care units increases the risk of serious infections for
patients; specifically pneumonia, a preventable and potential deadly
complication that can add thousands of dollars to the cost of care
for hospital patients. Click
here for the study.
The study is the second
in three months to link poor ICU staffing to hospital infections,
and the fourth this year to link poor RN-to-patient ratios to poor
patient outcomes for hospitalized patients. The new research bolsters
the case for increasing RN staffing in hospitals and limiting the
number of patients assigned to a nurse as has been proposed in pending
legislation, the Patient Safety Act (H.2059), currently before the
Massachusetts legislature.
Stéphane Hugonnet and colleagues from the University of
Geneva Hospitals, Switzerland, investigated the number of patients
admitted to the ICU who developed ventilator-associated pneumonia
(VAP), over a four-year period. They then compared this to the number
of nurses on duty for each patient in the preceding days. VAP affected
over a fifth of the 936 patients who received mechanical ventilation
during the
study. The team found that when there were lower numbers of
nurses, patients were more likely to catch pneumonia six days or
more after being placed on a ventilator. This could be due to short-staffed
nurses having less time to follow hand hygiene recommendations and
proper isolation procedures or being unable to provide adequate
care to the ventilated patient. The nurses’ training level
had no effect on infection rates.
“This
study shows that a low nurse-to-patient ratio increases the
risk of late-onset VAP,” said Hugonnet. “It also adds
to the growing body of evidence demonstrating that adequate staffing
is a key determinant and a prerequisite for adequate care and patient
safety.” VAP is caused by bacteria entering the lungs as a
consequence of the ventilator tubing and is one of the most common
preventable problems affecting critically ill hospital patients.
It can cause a stay of about an average of 10 extra days in the
hospital at a cost of of $10,000 to $40,000.
“This is yet another in a long line of recently published
studies that clearly demonstrate that improving RN staffing ratios
has enormous societal benefits in terms of lives saved and reduced
complications, while also being highly cost effective,” said
Karen Higgins, RN, an ICU nurses at Boston Medical Center and co-chair
of the Coalition to Protect Massachusetts Patients, an alliance
of 107 leading health care, civic and consumer groups promoting
passage of The Patient Safety Act. “There is no longer any
rationale for allowing hospitals to deprive patients of the lifesaving
care nurses are capable of providing if and when nurses have a safe
number of patients to care for at one time.”
A 2003 report by the prestigious Institute of Medicine on the impact
of nurses’ working conditions on patient safety found that
poor RN staffing and excessive overtime increased the likelihood
of preventable patient injuries and deaths. One of the recommendations
of the IOM report was for a strict limit of no more than two patients
for nurses in ICUs as well as to provide limits on overtime for
nurses.
Nurses in Massachusetts hospitals, including those working in ICUs
are regularly forced to accept unsafe patient assignments as identified
in the new study.
A study of actual RN staffing levels in the state’s hospitals
conducted by the Massachusetts Nurses Association and Andover Economic
Evaluation in 2006 found that 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.
The Patient Safety Act (H. 2059) would dramatically improve care
by setting a safe limit on the number of patients assigned to a
nurse. The measure, which is co-sponsored by State Rep. Christine
Canavan (D-Brockton) and Senator Marc Pacheco (D-Taunton), calls
upon the Department of Public Health to set a safe limit on the
number of patients a nurse is assigned at one time. In addition,
the bill calls for staffing ratios to be adjusted based on patient
needs. It also bans mandatory overtime, and includes initiatives
to increase nursing faculty and nurse recruitment. During the last
legislative session, the Massachusetts House of Representatives
passed a similar bill by a vote of 133-20. A hearing on the bill
has been scheduled before the Joint Committee on Public Health on
Oct. 24, 2007.
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