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What the Bill Does
Specific RN-to-Patient Ratios Called for by the
Bill
Currently,
there are no legal or regulatory mandates to ensure patients receive
a level of nursing care that is based upon accepted standards of nursing
practice or on their actual need for care. As the health care system
has moved to a deregulated, free-market system, where competition and
cost drive the industry, the pressures to cut nurse staffing, and the
resources allocated to nursing have escalated. This has resulted in
dramatic cuts in nurse staffing levels and an increase in the number
of patients each nurse is expected to care for.
State Rep.
Chrisitine Canavan, RN, in conjunction with the Massachusetts Nurses
Association and the Coalition to Protect Massachusetts Patients, has
filed An Act Ensuring Patient Safety to reverse these trends by mandating
nurse staffing which is sufficient to care for the planned and unplanned
needs of patients. It is based upon significant nursing research and
experience. The major provisions of the legislation include:
- Establishes
minimum "safety net" ratios. (See specific ratios
at left.) The ratios are the same for all three shifts.
- Provides
flexibility to improve ratios based on acuity. To provide
flexibility in staffing, and to account for patients who require
more care, the bill calls upon DPH to create an acuity based patient
classification system (or acuity scale) that will be used by all
hospitals to measure acuity and, when necessary, require hospitals
to reduce a nurse's assignment based on the needs of those patients.
This provision answers a key objection of the hospital industry,
which has argued that establishing minimum ratios is too rigid.
- Prohibits
the reduction of ancillary staff, including aides, technicians
and LPNs. The bill specifically states that hospitals
cannot justify meeting these ratios by reducing valuable ancillary
support staff.
- Prohibits
mandatory overtime and mandatory on-call. The bill prohibits
the practice of assigning nurses mandatory overtime or mandatory “on-call” policies
as a means of meeting the ratios.
- Prohibits
floating without proper orientation.
- Prohibits
unlicensed personnel from performing nursing tasks.
- Requires
collection and reporting of nurse-sensitive patient out come data
to evaluate patient care and nurse staffing.
- Provides
patients the right to know and demand safe ratios. The
bill provides strong consumer protections, including prominent
posting of the daily RN-to-patient ratio on each unit, as well
as a toll free hotline number, which may be used to report inadequate
nurse staffing to DPH. Violations would be investigatged by DPH
with the potential for fines.
Specific
RN-to-Patient Ratios Called for by the Bill
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