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MASSACHUSETTS NURSE NEWSLETTER :: November/December
2004
Executive director's message
Raising
the bar in the battle for safe RN staffing
With the 2004 MNA Convention over, the members have debated and
decided the course for the future. The five-year plan was embraced
and the funding provided through a modified approach as dictated
by the members. Members amended the proposal on the floor to stagger
and lower the initial phase-in of the dues increase (see front
page for breakdown) and while adopting the 2006 rate, the membership
voted to delete the 3 percent annual inflation factor from this
proposal.
The Board of Directors and finance committee will review and
adjust the five-year plan on the basis of the modifications members
made to the funding plan.
Now that the membership has determined the overall
financing structure, the primary goal will be to increase the
resources to
the labor program. Specifically, the funding will be used to provide
staff-to-unit assignments to ensure the bargaining units are well-organized,
well-educated and have an effective communication system in place.
The first priority is to add staff to ensure assignments that will
improve members' access to MNA staff. Additionally, and in conjunction
with this effort, further expansion of our labor education program
will occur as will increased education on occupational health and
safety. All these initial changes are designed to make bargaining
units stronger and more responsive to members so you are more powerful
in your workplace.
From the standpoint of direct communication and support among
and between bargaining units, the regions are now structured in
a way to support the needs of the local units. Each unit has a
designated seat at the regional level where their unit is located
and the region receives yearly funding based on the total number
of members residing within the region. The region has the ability
to allocate that money directly as it determines. I strongly encourage
chairs or their designees to utilize this forum. It provides an
unmatched venue for communication regarding contract bargaining
and evolving issues with the bargaining units as well as the ability
to coordinate strategies by bargaining units within the networks.
Ideas and decisions and funding to implement can be approved within
a single meeting. Community and legislative links can be fostered
with the region improving the ability to resolve contract disputes
or other matters more favorably with wider support.
Clearly, the primary goal of creating a legislated standard for
safe RN staffing in acute care hospitals will move forward beginning
in December, in preparation for the new legislative session that
starts the following month. While the ongoing efforts and near
passage of the bill last session has pressured some hospitals to
improve their staffing, many have not. Without passage of a safe
RN standard it is likely those who have seen improvements will
see staff disappear.
The momentum for passage is more in our favor – we will need
to execute strategies that build to our strengths, namely the credibility
of nurses and our organizational numbers. With more than 22,000
members, 90 percent favorability among all Massachusetts nurses
for this bill and 86 perent favorability by the public for this
bill, our efforts may not require great efforts by a few—but rather
smaller efforts by many.
The industry is already pursuing a predictable
approach. The double-digit vacancies they clamored about are
decreasing—not
because they hired more nurses or that your assignment has necessarily
lessened. Rather they've simply not filled the positions and declared
their vacancy rates reduced. Hospitals that previously claimed
double-digit vacancy rates will now claim they are solving the
problem and claim vacancy rates less than 10 percent or 5 percent
or even 0 percent!
Yet your assignment remains unchanged and the
numbers just don't
add up to increased RNs at the bedside. We can also expect the
industry to begin calling in consultants for re-engineering and
re-design solutions, aka, "alternative staffing methods."
Smoke and mirrors will not change reality. If
you are on a med/surg floor caring for more than four patients
on any shift, the research
shows your patients are in harm's way. With five patients they
are at a 7 percent risk for mistake, injury and even death; at
six they are at a 14 percent risk; at seven they are at 21 percent
risk; and at eight it's over a 31 percent risk. Which morbidity
or mortality rate is your hospital advocating? We know what we
are advocating: minimum, RN-to-patient ratios. Now. |