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Nurses Hail California Safe Hospital Staffing
Law
Mandates Staffing Levels on All Units
Nurses from across the nation are joining the California Nurses
Association (CAN) in hailing the signing last month of landmark
legislation that will make California the first state in the nation
to require safe hospital staffing. Gov. Gray Davis signed AB 394
on Oct.11, 1999, a bill authored by Assembly member Sheila Kuehl
(D-Santa Monica) and sponsored by CNA.
"This is one of the most significant days in the
history of nursing," said CNA President Kay McVay, RN. "This bill
will save the lives of countless numbers of patients needlessly
endangered by unsafe hospital conditions."
"I am really pleased that the governor understood
how important it was to sign this bill," said Kuehl. She called
the signing a "historic day for California families. It will rebuild
the safety net in California hospitals. This is a dramatic victory
for the thousands of nurses and patients and the CNA who worked
tirelessly to achieve this powerful reform."
AB 394 requires the State Department of Health Services
to adopt regulations establishing minimum, specific, and numerical
licensed nurse-to-patient ratios for all hospital units as presently
exist for intensive care units and operating rooms. It also prohibits
hospitals from requiring unlicensed, minimally trained personnel
to perform nursing functions such as invasive procedures, patient
assessment, patient education, or administration of medication.
The DHS will begin the process of establishing the
ratios in January. At the governor's request, Kuehl has agreed to
introduce follow up legislation next year to adjust the date of
final adoption of the regulations.
Here in Massachusetts, there was enthusiastic praise
for the bill’s passage, because of the signal it sends to the health
care industry and policy makers of the need for fundamental change
in health care regulation.
“I’m extremely excited about this and hope to see
this trend continue,” said Karen Higgins, chair of the MNA Cabinet
for Labor Relations. “For years, nurses have been in this battle
to assure that patients get the care they deserve. In fact, registered
nurses in Massachusetts at seven different facilities have gone
as far as threatening to strike over the issue of inadequate staffing.
I am thrilled to see a state legislature willing to help us achieve
our goal of safe care by mandating nurses needed to assure safe
patient care. Perhaps it can motivate our legislature to do the
same.”
Higgins was referring to the legislature’s consideration
of a similar MNA bill, "An Act to Ensure Sufficient Nursing Care",
which the MNA has filed three years in row. Each year, including
this legislative session, the Joint Committee on Health Care has
placed the bill in study committee.
MNA Director of Legilsation and Govenrment Affairs
Gloria Craven is "hopefully, the California passage will stir the
Massachusetts Legislature to again look seriously at the need for
safe staffing,” she said. “The Massachusetts legislation, not a
ratio bill, looks at the staffing based on the patients' acuity
of illness, their functional level and the standards of nursing
practice that nurses are held accountable to. It is our hope that
the Massachusetts legislature will focus on what's important, safe
and quality patients care delivered by skilled, licensed professional
nurses that meets the needs of those patients."
In addition to requiring ratios and limiting the
unsafe use of unlicensed staff, AB 394 mandates additional nursing
staff as needed based on individualized patient needs and severity
of illness. It also restricts unsafe assignment of nursing staff
to hospital areas for which they lack proper clinical training or
orientation, a growing problem in hospitals.
AB 394 was prompted by a growing crisis in nursing
care and patient safety standards in California hospitals that has
seen California fall to next to last in the nation in the average
number of nurses to patients.
According to the 1999 Dartmouth Atlas of Health
Care data, the national average of RNs is 3.22 per 1,000 population.
The California average is just 2.27 per 1,000. Only Washington State
is lower, at 2.19. (By contrast, some other large states with big
urban areas -- New York, 3.68, Pennsylvania, 3.66, Missouri, 3.89).
Recent research by the non-profit Institute for
Health and Socio-Economic Policy (IHSP) documented that fewer California
patients are well enough to be discharged home, coinciding with
a drop in the number of full-time RNs and staffed hospital beds.
Analyzing 18.2 million California hospital patient
discharge records, and other data from state agencies and the hospital
industry, the IHSP found an 8.8 percent increase in the average
number of patients for which each full-time RN must care from 1994-1997,
and a 7.2 percent fall in the number of full time employed RNs from
1994 to 1997.
The report also showed an increase in acuity levels
-- the severity of illness of hospital patients -- at the point
of hospital discharge increased by over 3 percent for the categories
of "major acuity" and "extreme acuity" from 1993 to 1997.
"Nurses today are required to care for many more
patients than they were a few years ago. Nurses are stretched so
thin they often have little time to render the most basic care patients
and their families need," McVay noted.
"As a result of years of downsizing, managed care
influenced cutbacks in services, and an end to hospital-based training
programs, our nursing care infrastructure has been badly damaged.
Many nurses have also voluntarily left the hospital setting.
"We have already seen a decline in the turnover
rate in hospitals with safer staffing levels. With the enactment
of AB 394, and the establishment of statewide staffing ratios, nurses
will return to hospital floors and we can restore uniform safety
standards for everyone," said McVay. |