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California Nurses Outline Proposed Staffing
Ratios
'Best Response to Nursing Shortage, Patient Care Crisis'
Proposal Based on Scientific Research,
21.7 Million Patient Discharge Records
The California Nurses Association last month announced
its proposal for minimum nurse-to-patient ratios. CNA, the state's
largest organization of registered nurses, said its proposal
offers the prospect of dramatic improvements in patient safety
and helping to resolve the state's shortfall of hospital nurses
by restoring safe care standards in California hospitals.
Licensed nurse-to-patient ratios are required for
all California hospitals under a CNA-sponsored law enacted in
1999. The final ratios, to be determined by the state Department
of Health Services, are to go into effect in January, 2002. The
Massachusetts Nurses Association has filed legislation similar
to that of the CNA, HB 1186, An Act Relative to Safe Nurse Staffing
to Ensure Safe Care, which the MNA hopes to pass in the current
legislative session. The ratios proposed by CNA serve as a guideline
for future work to be done here in Massachusetts, once our bill
is passed.
CNA's proposal is the first to be based on an exhaustive
research study of publicly available data - 21.7 million discharge
records of California hospital patients over the past six years
and the Diagnosis Related Groups (DRG) designations for the severity
of illness (acuity) for those patients.
"Adopting strong, effective and enforceable ratios
is the best response to the nursing care crisis that is undermining
the quality of care in California hospitals, and driving out
frustrated and exhausted RNs," said CNA President Kay McVay,
RN. "Our proposal meets the intent of Governor Davis and the
California Legislature in enacting the nation's first law requiring
ratios for hospital nurses. It would restore the tattered patient
safety net, rebuild our nursing care infrastructure, and redress
the nursing shortage."
CNA's proposed minimum ratios are as follows: Intensive
Care, 1 nurse to 2 patients (current law). Medical/Surgical Units,
Telemetry, or other Specialty care 1:3. Emergency Room, 1:3.
Burn, 1:2. Step Down/Intermediate Care, Definite Observation,
1:3. Active Labor and Delivery, 1:1. Obstetrics, 1:3. Post-Partum/Normal
Newborn Nursery, 1:5. Pediatrics, 1:3. Psychiatric, 1:4. Subacute
and Transitional Inpatient care, 1:4.
CNA's proposals derive from a research study by
the Institute for Health and Socio-Economic Policy (IHSP), a
non-profit research and policy group. The study was commissioned
by CNA and sponsored in part by the United Steelworkers of America. "It
is the first study in the nation to present a scientific basis
for specific ratios based on publicly available data reflecting
the actual patient need and severity of illness of an enormous
data group - the entire hospital patient discharge population,
nearly 22 million people," said McVay.
The IHSP analyzed 21.7 million patient discharge
acuity ratings collected by California Office of Statewide Health
Planning and Development (OSHPD) from 1993-1998 (the most recent
years available). OSHPD records a DRG designation for each discharge.
DRGs, the grouping of hospital patients together based on diagnostic,
therapeutic and demographic characteristics, are the long established
mechanism on which Medicare reimbursement rates are determined.
OSHPD assigns a severity of illness indicator,
a computer program it buys from the 3M Corporation, for each
of the nearly 500 DRGs it records.
To determine ratios by hospital unit, as required
by AB 394, the IHSP assembled a RN expert panel in December of
25 direct care RNs from 22 diverse California hospitals with
over 500 cumulative years of experience in hospital nursing.
The panel was directed to identify in what unit in their hospital,
based on their professional expertise, a patient with each of
the DRG designations would most likely be placed under current
conditions.
With all the DRGs, and their 3M acuity (severity
of illness) indicator now grouped by presumed units, the IHSP
then calculated the average acuity of each unit, based on the
illness of the patients presently housed in those units. The
IHSP used the Intensive Care Unit nurse-to-patient ratio of 1:2,
which has been the law in California for two decades, as a baseline
for establishing the ratios in other units.
Among its findings, the IHSP recorded that 15 to
20 percent of hospital patients are inappropriately placed in
units not sufficient for the care needed for their degree of
illness.
To compensate for potential error, the IHSP offered
a low, middle, and high range of acuity, and potential ratio
for each unit. The CNA Board of Directors subsequently voted
to endorse the middle range recommendation for its proposed ratios.
To supplement the IHSP study, CNA also conducted
a series of 19 Town Hall meetings held across the state this
year (two more are scheduled later this month) to gather additional
information - the direct experience of front line RNs about patient
care conditions today.
"It was the overwhelming sentiment of the hundreds
of RNs who attended our town hall meetings that we are in a grave
patient care crisis. They testified that patients are jeopardized
daily by dangerous conditions and poor staffing, and frustrated
nurses are leaving the profession because they believe they can
no longer provide the care their patients need," said McVay.
"These ratios, based on the actual conditions in
hospitals today, and the severity of illness of today's hospital
patients, are what the public needs for safe care," said McVay.
She said the CNA will now "encourage the DHS to adopt these standards,
and urge nurses across the state to rally in support of these
safe ratios for their patients."
Click here to
visit the California Nurses Assocation web site.
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