05.05.2008
Measure Calls for Safe Limits on Nurses’ Patient Assignments, Prohibits Mandatory Overtime and Includes Initiatives to Increase Nursing Faculty & Nursing Scholarships – State House Rally for the Bill on May 6
BOSTON, Mass.—The 130-member Coalition to Protect Massachusetts Patients applauds the vote last week by the Joint Committee on Health Care Financing to approve a bill to guarantee safe RN staffing in all Massachusetts hospitals. The measure, The Patient Safety Act, calls upon the Massachusetts Department of Public Health to set safe limits on nurses’ patient assignments, and also prohibits mandatory overtime and includes initiatives to increase nursing faculty and nurse recruitment. The committee voted 15 – 3 in favor of the measure, which now moves onto the House Ways and Means Committee.
The vote to advance the bill came the week before hundreds of nurses and supporters of nurses from across the Commonwealth plan to hold a rally in support of the measure in front of the State House in Boston on May 6 (1 p.m.), which is National Nurses Day.
The bill responds to increased concern over quality care in Massachusetts hospitals as well as evidence linking disease and deaths to poor patient oversight caused by nurses being forced to care for too many patients at one time. In recent years medical errors and hospital acquired infections have soared, with the Mass. Coalition for the Prevention of Medical Errors now estimating that 2,000 people, or six people per day, are dying in Massachusetts because of them every year. Numerous studies link the rise in hospital-acquired infections and other medical complications to understaffing of nurses. For example, a report published in the July issue of the journal Medical Care found that safe RN staffing levels could reduce hospital acquired infections by 68 percent.
In May 2006, the Massachusetts House of Representatives passed similar legislation by a margin of 133 to 20 but the bill was not taken up by the Senate. The Patient Safety Act is co-sponsored by State Representative Christine Canavan (D-Brockton) and State Senator Marc Pacheco (D-Taunton). “At last, we have movement on the Patient Safety Act,” said Rep. Canavan. “I am so pleased that the Joint Committee on Health Care Financing recognizes the merits of this bill. Now we must all join together to successfully move it through the House and Senate processes. Let’s make this the year we finally reach the Governor’s desk!”
“We commend the committee for their favorable vote on this bill and we look forward to a successful vote in the full House,” said John McCormack, the co-chair of The Coalition to Protect Massachusetts Patients. “Every day we wait for this bill to be passed, a distressing number of patients in our hospitals are suffering due to a lack of appropriate nursing care.”
Key components of the bill include the following:
To date, 130 of the state’s leading health care and patient advocacy groups have endorsed the Patient Safety Act and have joined forces to push for its passage in both the House and Senate. Recent voter surveys indicate that more than 80 percent of the public supports establishing safe staffing limits.
###