|
 |

07.11.2006
ADVOCATES
FOR PATIENT SAFETY URGE SENATE TO ACT ON NURSE STAFFING LEGISLATION
BOSTON—Chanting
“vote, vote, vote,” supporters of legislation that would
require a state public health agency to establish staffing standards
for nurses in acute care hospitals in Massachusetts today urged
the state Senate to take action on the bill.

If passed, the Patient Safety Act would direct the Department of
Public Health to use scientific research, expert testimony, and
accepted best practices to establish optimum nurse-to-patient ratios
for various hospital units, as well as to set a limit on the maximum
number of patients to which any one nurse could be assigned. The
bill, which passed the House of Representatives overwhelmingly in
May, is backed by the Coalition to Protect Massachusetts Patients,
which consists of 106 healthcare, consumer, patient advocacy, and
consumer organizations.
“Somewhere along the line, we just lost good old-fashioned
common sense,” said state Sen. Marc Pacheco (D-Taunton), the
Senate sponsor of the legislation. “For anyone to be against
the Department of Public Health establishing fair and common sense
regulations for patients ... it’s almost criminal.”
Speaking before some 50 supporters of the bill – a group that
included many frontline registered nurses, as well as patient advocates
and senior citizen advocates – gathered on the front steps
of the State House, Pacheco noted that the government regulates
many other industries and has a moral responsibility to act to ensure
that hospital patients receive the best care possible.
“It is incumbent upon Beacon Hill to ensure that patient safety
is paramount in Massachusetts,” he said.
The Patient Safety Act, officially known as House 4988, also calls
on DPH to establish a system to rate the illness level of patients,
so that those nurses assigned to care for the most seriously ill
people accordingly will be assigned fewer patients. At today’s
demonstration, a supporter described a crisis situation caused by
inadequate staffing.
“Make no mistake about it, every day in Massachusetts patients
are suffering in pain; patients are being neglected; patients are
falling; patients are experiencing preventable and costly complications
simply because their nurse is not there when they need them to be
there because he or she is struggling to meet the needs of too many
other patients,” said Beth Piknick, president of the Massachusetts
Nurses Association.
An overwhelming body of evidence shows that the health and safety
of hospital patients is seriously jeopardized when their registered
nurse is caring for too many patients at once, the Coalition said.
Numerous studies have shown a correlation between registered nurse
staffing levels and the outcome of patients’ hospital stays,
finding that when adequate staffing ratios are in place, patients
suffer fewer complications, medical errors, and re-admissions.
Jeremiah Hurley of the Massachusetts Senior Action Council said
senior citizens “support this bill because we, more than any
other demographic group, spend more time in the hospital than anyone
else. We know the value of having a nurse there when you need one.
For us, this goes well beyond politics; for us, this is a matter
of life and death.”
Linda DeBenedictis, president of the New England Patients Rights
Group, cited a recent survey of patients in Massachusetts hospitals
showing that one in four reported their safety was compromised during
their hospital stay due to understaffing of registered nurses. She
called H. 4988 “a fair and reasonable solution to the patient
safety crisis” that would save thousands of lives every year.”
John McCormack, a patient advocate and author of Taylor’s
Law named for his 13-month old daughter who died as a result of
a preventable medical error, stated that death from medical errors
was a “leading cause of death in America,” and that
“poor nurse staffing was a major cause of these deaths.”
McCormack said he was urging the Senate to take immediate action
the bill so that “no other father will experience my pain.”
The Patient Safety Act additionally prevents understaffing of other
health care workers who support nurses in caring for patients, and
prevents delegation of duties that demand nursing expertise to unlicensed
personnel. It also establishes nurse recruitment initiatives sought
by the hospital industry.
###
|
 |