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12.08.2003
St. Elizabeth’s
Medical Center RNs to Hold Candlelight Vigil on Dec. 8 from 4:30 – 6 p.m.
As Contract Talks
Stall Over Staffing, Mandatory Overtime, Pension and Pay Nurses Dispute Highlights
Growing Health Care Crisis, as Poor Staffing, Working Conditions and Inadequate
Benefits Threaten Patients’ Access to Safe Nursing Care
BRIGHTON, Mass. – Registered nurses at St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center (SEMC) in
Brighton will hold a candlelight vigil outside the facility (at the corner of
Cambridge and Washington Sts.) on Monday, Dec. 8, 2003 from 4:30 - 6 p.m. The
nurses planned the vigil to draw public attention to key issues in dispute in
stalled contract talks with management that the nurses believe impact their
ability to deliver safe care to patients at the facility.
More than 650 registered
nurses are represented by the Massachusetts Nurses Association at SEMC. They
have been negotiating their contract since June, with 16 negotiating sessions
held to date. Key issues in dispute include the nurses’ demand for contractually
mandated RN-to-patient ratios, an end to the use of mandatory overtime to cover
for the inadequate staffing at the facility and the need for an increase in
their salaries to remain competitive with other Boston teaching hospitals. The
nurses are paid between 21 – 30 percent less than their counterparts at
other Boston teaching hospitals, which is causing many nurses to leave the hospital
and preventing the recruitment of others to help address the growing staffing
problems at the hospital.
The nurses were
further outraged by a recent demand by the management of Caritas Christi Health
Systems, the owner of SEMC, to dismantle the nurses’ long-time defined
benefit pension plan as of January 1, a move that could result in the loss of
up to 30 percent of the value of the nurses’ retirement benefit.
“The nurses
have decided that in light of the seriousness of the issues on the table, it
was time to communicate directly to the public and let them know the true impact
of these negotiations,” said CeCe Buckley, RN, a nurse at SEMC and co-chair
of the Massachusetts Nurses Association bargaining team at the facility. “We
don’t have the staff to provide the safe care patients expect and deserve.
Nurses are being forced to work long hours against their will, which is hampering
their ability to deliver safe care, and management’s refusal to pay a
competitive wage, along with their assault on our pension and other benefits,
is preventing this facility from keeping nurses and from recruiting nurses to
ensure safe patient care. We want the public to know that there’s more
than a contract on the line here, the very safety of patients is at stake.”
Unsafe
Staffing is at Center of Dispute
The nurses’
dispute comes at a time when the issue of poor RN staffing and poor working
conditions for nurses has gained statewide as well as national prominence, as
numerous research studies and official government reports document a dramatic
deterioration in the quality and safety of patient care in our nation’s
hospitals. Here in Massachusetts, the Department of Public Health reported last
month that medical errors and patient complaints for the commonwealth's hospitals
jumped 32 percent in the last three years; 76 percent over the last seven, with
the majority of these incidents related to nursing care. At nearly the same
time, the prestigious Institute of Medicine of the National Academies joined
the chorus of medical researchers who have found that “there is a clear
relationship between staffing levels and patient safety.”
The nurses at St.
Elizabeth’s have been struggling for years to convince management to improve
RN-to- patient ratios in the hospital to better protect patients. Nurses at
SEMC who work on a medical/surgical floor are regularly assigned more than the
safe standard of four patients and on many occasions, up to eight patients at
a time.
The staffing ratios
at SEMC and the danger they present to patients were brought into sharp focus
with the release of a study on RN staffing and patient outcomes published in
the prestigious Journal of the American Medical Association. The study was the
first to tie hospital death rates directly to nurses’ caseloads. “We
found that for every additional patient added to a nurse’s caseload after
they have four patients already, there is a 7 percent increase in the risk of
death,” according to Linda Aiken, Ph.D., RN and the study’s author.
To better protect
patients, nurses are asking the hospital to establish contractually guaranteed
RN-to-patient ratios, specific to every floor and specialty unit in the hospital.
The ratios are based on the results of the JAMA study, and mirror the ratios
contained in legislation passed in California and those currently contained
in legislation before the Massachusetts legislature. The bill, H. 1282 An Act
Ensuring Quality Patient Care and Safe RN Staffing, was recently approved by
the Joint Committee on Health Care and has been endorsed by more than 60 of
the state’s leading health care and citizen advocacy organizations.
“The nurses
have looked at the current staffing levels, compared them to the best scientific
research, to pending legislation and they have concluded that we need these
ratios to be part of our contract to ensure that no patient at our hospital
has his or her life placed at risk simply because a nurse has too many patients
to care for. While we have joined thousands other nurses and citizens in pushing
for safe staffing legislation on Beacon Hill, we can’t afford to wait
for the legislature to act on this measure because every day we wait, the well
being of our patients is placed at unnecessary risk,” said Mary Rogers,
co-chair of the nurses’ union.
Nurses
Seek End to Mandatory Overtime
In addition to
being assigned too many patients to care for on a regular basis, mandatory overtime
is a regular occurrence at the facility, and the dangerous practice is being
used as an alternative means of staffing the facility.
The practice of
using forced overtime to staff hospitals has been widely condemned in recent
years and has led to an increase in errors and injuries, and it has also led
to a number of high profile nurses’ strikes in Massachusetts and throughout
the country. Last month, the prestigious Institute of Medicine issued a report
that also condemned the practice stating that unlike other safety-sensitive
industries, such as nuclear energy, public and commercial transportation, the
military, police and fire – that have responded to overwhelming scientific
evidence and placed limits on overtime, “the health care industry is notable
in that, with few exceptions, it places no such limit on work hours. The IOM
report concluded that, “Health care and labor organizations representing
nursing staff should establish policies and practices designed to prevent nurses
who provide direct patient care from working longer than 12 hours in a 24 hour
period..”
Buckley is well
aware of the dangers of the practice of mandatory overtime. She tells a story
of being forced to work extra hours against her will and against her doctor’s
orders when she was eight months pregnant.
“I got through
the shift, and nothing bad happened, but it could have. I had to make a choice
between leaving a very ill and vulnerable patient or potentially harming my
child or myself. I should have never been placed in that position. No nurse
should be forced to make those choices. It’s up to a hospital to have
staff to operate. But nearly every day they are forcing a nurse in this hospital
to make similar choices.”
As recommended
in the IOM report, the nurses of SEMC are proposing language be added to their
contract that would prohibit any nurse from working more than 12 hours, and
would provide the nurse with the right to refuse overtime anytime he or she
felt too ill or too tired to provide safe patient care. Similar language has
been included in a number of contracts negotiated by the MNA. Caritas management
has refused to accept the language, demanding the right to assign nurses to
work up to 16 hours.
Protecting
Pension Benefit
Caritas management
has also come to the negotiating table demanding the right to dismantle the
nurses’ pension benefit, unilaterally changing it from a defined benefit
to a defined contribution plan as of Jan.
1, 2004. Under a defined benefit pension plan, the employer is obligated to
provide a guaranteed contribution to the employees’ pension and is obligated
to provide a guaranteed level of retirement benefit to the employee regardless
of the investment returns of the plan. Under the defined contribution plan proposed
by Caritas Christi, both the employer and the employee would make contributions
to a 401K type retirement investment plan, with the investment risk borne entirely
by the nurses. For many nurses at SEMC, a change to a defined contribution pension
plans could cut their retirement benefits by as much as 30 percent.
“The competition
for nurses in the current labor market is fierce. One of the strongest benefits
offered by the Caritas system, and one of the most important tools for retaining
our most seasoned and experienced nurses, is our defined benefit,” Buckley
explained. “This benefit may be the single item in our contract that is
causing nurses to hang in with SEMC. And now they want to take that away.”
Competitive
Pay to Recruit and Retain Staff
One of the most
important issues contributing to the staffing problems at SEMC is the below-market
wages paid to nurses at the facility compared to other hospitals in the city,
particularly teaching hospitals. The disparity is most acute for the more experienced
nurses, where St. Elizabeth’s nurses at the top of the salary scale are
paid between 21 – 30 percent below nurses at Brigham & Women’s
Hospital, New England Medical Center and Boston Medical Center. St. Elizabeth’s
salary scale barely exceeds that of many smaller community hospitals.
“We are
losing nurses every week to other facilities in this city, valuable, talented
nurses who don’t see why they should do the same work for inferior pay
and unacceptable staffing conditions when they can just cross the city and work
for New England Medical Center or Brigham & Women’s,” Rogers
explained. “If we can’t recruit new nurses, and more importantly
retain our existing staff, we will not be able to staff this hospital appropriately.”
In addition to
the candlelight vigil, the nurses have hand delivered a written appeal to the
office of Archbishop Sean P. O’Malley, citing their concerns and seeking
a personal meeting with the Archbishop on the issues.
“We understand
that the Archbishop has a personal history of labor activism and has publicly
stated that the archdiocese has a commitment to the rights of workers,”
Buckley said. “We want him to understand how this arm of the church, which
has a mission of caring for the sick, is implementing labor policies that violate
that mission and strip the rights of workers.”
The nurses’
contract, which expired on Nov. 14, 2003, has been extended through December
8, with the next negotiating session following the candlelight vigil scheduled
for Dec. 15.
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