| 3.11.2003
UMass
Memorial Medical Center Nurses Plan to Picket on March 13th
As Contract Talks Stall Over Staffing, Lack of Appropriate Supplies
and the Need for a Salary Commensurate With Nurses' Skills and Experience
According
to Recent JAMA Study, University Campus Staffing Ratios Place Some Patients
at 31 – 49% Greater Risk of Death
Nurses
Regularly Report Having a Lack of Supplies Needed to Provide Safe Patient
Care
WORCESTER,
Mass.—After more than 11 months of negotiations with hospital management
over their union contract, the registered nurses of UMass Memorial -
University Campus will conduct an informational picket on March 13,
2003 outside the Plantation Street entrance to the facility from 4 p.m.
– 6 p.m.
The key
issues stalling a settlement include the hospital's refusal to accept
language creating a union-management staffing tribunal to develop safer
staffing levels, the hospital's refusal to accept language committing
them to provide necessary supplies for the delivery of appropriate nursing
care, and the hospital's refusal to pay nurses a salary that reflects
the complex nature of nursing care required at the University Campus,
the most sophisticated and demanding health care environment for nurses
in all of Central Mass. The hospital wants to limit RN seniority rights
by insisting on the right to decide which RNs are competent to exercise
bumping rights during a reduction inforce.
"We will
conduct informational picketing to alert the public of our concern for
the safety and quality of patient care at this facility given the chronic
understaffing of registered nurses and the lack of resources to deliver
the first-rate care our patients deserve," said Kate Maker, chair of
the local bargaining unit.
More than
700 registered nurses are represented by the Massachusetts Nurses Association
on the University Campus. The nurses' contract expired on April 1, 2002
and talks began on April 16. To date, 28 negotiating sessions have been
held, with the last seven sessions facilitated by a federal mediator.
At the
center of the nurses' complaints is the lack of management's recognition
of the complexity of the services provided on the University Campus
and its impact on the RNs workload, the level of skill and experience
required to deliver care and the lack of recognition of the value they
bring to the organization.
"We are
the major trauma center, a regional transplant center and a leading
research/teaching facility for all of Central Mass," said Maker. "Our
nurses work with the most complex cases, with experimental, cutting-edge
drugs and procedures. We have the most sophisticated and demanding practice
in the region and we deserve to be paid on a par with nurses in the
state who provide the same level of care. Why? Because we are losing
nurses every day to major teaching hospitals in Boston who pay their
nurses a fair salary for their experience."
If you
compare the University Campus nurses' salaries to those in facilities
of comparable complexity, the nurses are dramatically underpaid when
compared to Brigham & Women's Hospital and New England Medical Center.
The hospital's proposal would place the University Campus nurses 10%
below the salaries of nurses in comparable facilities.
The salary
issue takes on added significance when nurses compare their working
conditions with those of better staffed facilities. University Campus
staffing levels are among the worst in the area, and are well below
those of teaching hospitals in Boston.
"We are
in the midst of a nursing shortage, driven by low salaries and poor
staffing conditions. We will never provide the level of care our patients
expect unless and until we guarantee their nurses the conditions they
need to want to work in this high stress environment," Maker said.
Below is
a summary of each of the key issues in dispute:
Unsafe
Staffing Conditions
"Our staffing
ratios are not just inadequate, they are patently dangerous in some
cases," said Maker.
"Nurses
on some floors are regularly assigned 6 and 7 patients per nurse, and
sometime as many as 11 patients, this on a floor with severely ill trauma,
neurological and surgical patients requiring constant monitoring and
oversight from their nurses," said Sally Charest, RN. According
to a recent study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association,
these ratios are life threatening. The study found that for every patient
over 4 that is assigned to a nurse there is a 7% increase in mortality
of those patients. The risk of death and complications for a patient
being cared for by a nurse with 7 patients is 21% higher; for a patient
whose nurse has 11 patients, it is 49% higher.
While staffing
conditions have been a problem at the facility for a number of years,
they have worsened following changes made by the Hunter Group to consolidate
floors and to cut resources and staff that provided support to the nurses.
These staffing
levels are untenable for a typical community hospital, never mind a
trauma center. "We have newly recruited RNs who leave within the first
six (6) months of hire because they can't believe the level of patient
acuity and the patient load. These RNs opted to leave, rather than practice
in these circumstances," Maker explained.
To address
the problem, the MNA has proposed contract language that has been successful
at other facilities with similar problems, including Boston Medical
Center and Cambridge Health Alliance, where John O'Brien had served
as CEO before coming to UMass Memorial.
The language calls for the creation of a staffing tribunal, made up
of equal numbers of union members and nurse managers. The group would
have 90 days to review the staffing on all floors and to develop new
staffing patterns to ensure safe patient care. These recommendations
would be presented to management and could not be unreasonably denied.
The hospital
has instead only proposed that the RNs discuss issues with a staffing
advisory committee that would have no binding authority to establish
staff guidelines for each floor or unit based upon the
number of patients and their acuity.
"We have
been talking to management about these issues for months and nothing
changes. It's time they made a commitment to work with us to ensure
that staffing at this facility is safe and appropriate. This process
has worked in other places and it can work here," said Kathie Logan,
RN, bargaining unit vice-chair.
Lack
of Appropriate Supplies
Nurses
are also concerned about a chronic lack of appropriate basic equipment
and supplies needed to take care of patients. Nurses in the Intensive
Care Unit report that oftentimes there is insufficient equipment and
supplies on a unit, requiring RNs to spend precious time tracking down
and borrowing the necessary items. Other departments report a chronic
lack of oxygen tanks for patients with respiratory problems.
"Nurses
are forced to scramble and literally grovel for supplies from other
departments to ensure their patients get what they need," Maker said.
"It's absurd that a hospital operates in this way and that patients
suffer because nurses don't have the most basic items at their disposal.
We have complained about these problems for years and nothing is done
to address them. Instead, we only get promises of change."
To address
the problem, the union has proposed simple language that obligates the
hospital to provide necessary resources and supplies to provide care.
Once in the contract, the nurses would have the right to use the grievance
and arbitration process to force the hospital to provide adequate supplies.
"It's sad
that we have to push for language to obligate a hospital to do what
it should do automatically, but we can't allow the current neglect of
patients to continue. We need some leverage to make them act responsibly,"
said Maker.
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