Dr. Dean (democratic primary contender) on Nursing

Published

DEAN PROMISES FAST ACTION TO AVERT A NURSING SHORTAGE

Governor Howard Dean today proposed a five-point plan to address the current and impending nursing shortage, warning that a failure to address this crisis threatens the quality and availability of health care for years to come.

"According to a recent government report, the nursing shortage will grow from 6% in 2000 to 12% in 2010, resulting in a shortage of approximately one million nurses. * This drastic shortage comes at a time that we need nurses more than ever. This is a problem that this country can't afford to ignore - for the sake of patients and families, our health system, and nurses themselves." Dean said.

"Why do people want to become nurses?" Dean asked. "Most nurses will tell you that it's because they want to help people. Why do they leave the profession? Most nurses will tell you that it's because they can't give patients the care that they know they need. In fact, their jobs and their work conditions often stand in the way of good care. What nurses want are the things that make good patient care possible and a career in which the value of nursing is understood, supported, and fairly compensated. Imagine choosing a career because you want to care for others, making personal sacrifices and going into debt to get your education only to discover that you may be driven out of your profession long before your loans are even paid off."

"Our nursing shortage is partly a problem of "aging" - not enough young people coming into the profession. The average nurse today is about 44 years old**. But that's far from the whole story - the average nurse is also planning to leave her current job within a year, and hopes to retire within about 10 years," Dean said. "We have the perfect equation for disaster - we aren't getting enough young people - and too many of those at the height of their competence are leaving. At another level, we do not have nearly enough minorities or men in the profession."

"The symptoms are already with us. Many American hospitals have nurse staff vacancy rates in double digits - some over 20%. As the burden on nurses has increased, their health and safety on the job have become threatened. The stress and strain of large patient loads and low staffing take a toll with one result being injury rates higher than those in many heavy industries."

"Nursing is the heart of a health care system," says Dean. "If you doubt that, ask a doctor. And if any doctor doubts that, ask a patient. Day in, day out, when we are sick, scared, and in the greatest need of support, care, and technically competent help, nurses are the true helpers there, on the front line, relieving suffering and assuring safety. We know from hard research that when nurse staff ratios decrease, so does patient safety. The same happens when nurses are forced to work long beyond normal shift hours."

"The needs for care are only going to get greater. What are we going to do when the baby boomers get old and sick? What about the many vulnerable people in our society - the elderly, minority populations, children? Who's going to care for them in hospitals, nursing homes, schools, and at home? As we all know, public health threats are increasing, as well. Nurses have been the foundation for the public health system in our communities."

"How do we solve this problem?" Dean asked. "Ask a nurse. I have. And that's how I developed my plan to address the nursing shortage, which will restore new health, vitality, safety, and vigor to the nursing profession:

Governor Dean's Plan to Address the Nursing Shortage

1. Ban "mandatory overtime"

Being a nurse is tough enough work without being forced to work two 8 hours shifts in one 24-hour day. Of course, such a ban would have exceptions for cases of national or local emergency, but there's no doubt that nurses would be among the first to volunteer to work overtime in a time of crisis.

2. Improve Working Conditions and Compensation for Nurses

First, make it easier, safer, and more rewarding for nurses to care for their patients. Hold hospitals and other health care institutions accountable by setting federal minimum staffing ratios that ensure a safe number of nurses to each patient. Nurses need enough time with their patients, and adequate staffing will improve patient outcomes, improve patient satisfaction, reduce medical errors and bring nurses back to the profession

Second, provide separate Medicare reimbursement for their services. Medicare does not currently recognize the economic value of nurses, and there is no way to be sure that Medicare reimbursements to hospitals ever go to support nursing services. When Medicare starts to recognize and reimburse fairly for nursing services, private insurance companies and hospitals will too.

Third, improve workplace safety. Nurses face great physical risk, including threats of violence in emergency rooms, contagious bacteria, and lifting heavy patients from bed to chair. They need to know that their workplaces are as safe as they can be. Governor Dean will work for federal legislation to ensure nurses' workplace safety.

3. Open the Door to Nursing

The shortage of nurses won't be solved solely by addressing the problems facing our current nursing workforce. We also need to remove the barriers stopping young people from entering the profession. This means helping young people see their futures in the profession, preparing them to become professional nurses, and making sure that they can afford the education that they need.

First, recruit minorities - and men - to the nursing profession

Diversity is good for the profession, for the health care system, and for patients. And outreach to nontraditional communities will increase the number of people entering the nursing workforce.

Second, offer nurses flexible scheduling and part-time work

Almost 500,000 licensed registered nurses were not employed as nurses in 2000.* Flexible and part-time schedules might draw some back to work in the profession, and attract new, young people seeking a rewarding profession where they can successfully juggle work and family responsibilities.

Third, improve education opportunities for nurses

Governor Dean's higher education program will include special assistance for students who decide to enter nursing as a career so that no one who wishes to be a nurse will be burdened by unmanageable debt.

Governor Dean will increase support for the Federal Division of Nursing in the Department of Health and Human Services and funding through the Nurse Reinvestment Act. This program aims to improve and expand access to education - providing more well-prepared faculty, enhanced programs, and reduced barriers to education. The governor's reform agenda includes funding for scholarships and loans, preparing faculty, enhancing educational technology, and expanding pathway programs for minority and disadvantaged students.

4. Give Nurses the Help They Need To Do Their Jobs

Somewhere between 25 to 50 percent of nurses' time is spent on non-nursing work. We need to let nurses care for patients and let other personnel support them in their work. This means preventing federal health programs from allowing unlicensed or unqualified personnel to do the work of registered nurses (RNs) or licensed practical nurses (LPNs). There is a place in our health care system for many different types of health care personnel, but we shouldn't try to save money by giving nursing duties to less well qualified workers - or by using precious nursing time doing things that others can do. It won't be long before serious mistakes are made, and patients will pay the price.

We also need to reduce the paperwork burden on nurses, and Governor Dean will support legislation to simplify paperwork and reduce duplication. Federal regulations are complex enough without having to do everything twice.

5. Expand the Role of and Compensation for Independent Nurse Practitioners

All federal health programs should allow independent nurse practitioners and other advanced practice nurses to provide the health care they are educated and licensed to provide. These nurses shouldn't require the direct supervision of a physician, and need to be provided with fair compensation. Governor Dean believes that, as an internist, the majority of people he saw on a first visit could have received excellent care from a competent nurse practitioner, without his direct supervision.

Other Steps to Reform the Nursing Profession

In addition to the five specific steps above, Governor Dean will support other actions to alleviate the country's nursing crisis:

Bring nurses to rural areas and other areas of need through the National Health Service Corps and by adopting scholarship and loan forgiveness programs.

Provide incentives for hospitals and other practice settings to subsidize nursing education and provide internship and residency opportunities for new nurses.

We need to reduce the barriers to collaboration between education and practice so that our future nurses have the best possible learning experiences. Our hospitals, clinics and agencies cannot afford to bear the costs of clinical education alone -nor can our educational programs. They need the help of financial incentives to continue costly teaching programs.

Increase pay for nursing school faculty

Nursing faculty often make less than a hospital staff nurse. If there are no teachers of nursing, or if they are not excellent teachers, it won't matter how many students we are able to recruit, and those we do recruit won't be properly educated or trained.

Actively engage nursing leaders and front line nurses in the development of proactive policy and programs

We should actively support the work of the National Advisory Council on Nurse Education and Practice, and other key federal nursing advisory groups, as crucial mechanisms for assuring that future federal efforts are built on the best possible advice.

Reduce medical errors by promoting doctor-nurse communication systems that respect the value, medical knowledge, and skills of nurses

Studies in other high-risk industries have shown that improved communication leads to a significant decrease in dangerous errors.

* Projected Supply, Demand and Shortages of Registered Nurses: 2000-2020 (released on 7/30/03 by the National Center for Health Workforce Analysis, Bureau of Health Professions, Health Resources and Services Administration, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services). The Bureau of Labor Statistics, in an earlier report, predicted that that we will need one million new nurses by 2010 (Monthly Labor Review - November 2001) to cover new positions and replace the nurses who have retired.

** According to the 2000 National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses, the average age of an employed registered nurse is 43 and the average age of all registered nurses is 45.

http://nurses4dean.com/Dean_on_nursing_issues.htm

Originally posted by geekgolightly

What I find to be really interesting baout his whole campaign is that he has said time and again that he is a fiscal conservative and greens in his state despise him for siding with businesses. I don't think he's a "conservative," nor could I ever think him to be a "liberal." He is financially responsible, he believes in taking care of debt and balancing the budget. He cuts programs designed to help people that he thinks don;t work or are frivolous. But he is definitely dedicated to healthcare and designing an insurance plan for all americans. And as he is a doctor, he has a personal stake in making sure it works not only for the people, but for the healthcare industry as well.

His stance on Iraq has nothing to do with being a liberal or a conservative. He is very pragmatic. As he has said, he would have approached it all very differently. He has never said that he would avoid war, but has said that there were many avenues that were not explored. Even Newt Gingrich has stated publically that Bush is going baout the war irresponsibly.

As far as civil unions for homosexuals goes, well... if you don;t like it, then you don;t like it. At least he has the balls to take a stand.

I believe he would do what he says he will do. I believe he will honor his word.

Like I said, if I had my choice, I would put Carol Mosley Braun in charge. I will vote for Dean because I think he is the most logical choice. I am not emotionally attached to him. He does not seem to be any type of savior or champion for my value system, but he does seem really straight forward and no-nonsense, and smart enough so that I could trust him to make decent decisions. That's just about all I can hope for.

Now, if you are a social conservative (read: authoritarian) there is no reason to vote for Dean. Go for Bush, for sure.

These are all good points. If he does get elected, I do hope he follows through on this promise. While I agree completely that something needs to be done about healthcare, I get nervous whenever people talk about universal healthcare. I don't like the idea of the federal government being in control of something as important as healthcare. Not only that, but I don't think it would be as perfect of a system. I know Canada's system has both good and bad points. Some of the bad points being extremely long waits. I've read that patients have actually died waiting to get surgery there.

Now, I think if there were away to combine our two systems some how, some kind of half government, half private healthcare system. I have no idea how to go about it, or how it would work though. I think you have to maintain some kind of profit motive for doctors and healthcare workers, or else you risk sacrificing quality, BUT you don't what inflated costs or padded bills to gain extra profit, so I don't know what the solution is.

After spending the last 30 years as a registered Republican, I had to do some serious soul-searching and realized that my personal values and political views have changed significantly. In my case, change was good. Therefore, I changed my political affiliation and reregistered as a Democrat. I am very impressed with Howard Dean and plan to support him in the upcoming election. Thank you for starting this thread. In addition to coming out as a Democrat, this is my first post at Allnurses. What a fantastic site!

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

Welcome, Quailfeather!! Glad you like it here!

I remember the news in the summer of 91 when Govenor Snelling died suddenly and then how bizarre a Dr was going to be our new govenor of Vermont.

Vermont is a state of 500,000 people. It is a state of the most mixed up conservative/liberal politics I have ever seen. They are either really out in left field or really out in right field. They were ok to allow gay marriages, but stopped a Wal-Mart from coming into my hometown because of Act 51. The people of Vermont seem either really rich or really poor. It is a SMALL state. Very much is the sense of being a neighborly as long as it doesn't affect my backyard.

I left in 1998, I never recall that Howard Dean being involved in a scandal in all those years in office. Some of his policies are more Republican at times than that of a true Democrat. I do know that he had been involved in legal issues that 3 Vermont newspapers had sued him over, for what, I don't know.

Burlington Free Press is Vermont's largest paper. Some of it is online for those looking for the true dirt on Dean.

I just hope that he does take his medical background to make some good on his platform.

Specializes in ER, ICU, L&D, OR.

Hells bells

From what I have read Dean sounds good. You look at his record and see what he has done FOR Vemonters, and it speaks volumes. As opposed to Bushie, and his record of what he has done TO Texans as a governor, that also speaks volumes as well. How did Bushie ever get elected.

The more I read the more impressed I become. It has been a very long time, perhaps never that I have actually felt good about a candidate. In the past it is finding the lesser of two evils and voting for them.

It was actually my 20 year old son who turned me onto Dean with his stand on education. I then became aware of his stand on healthcare and nursing. Awesome. I hope he can continue on like this and be able to implement the much needed changes. ;)

Specializes in Case Mgmt; Mat/Child, Critical Care.

I KNEW I liked Dean! I was already impressed with this candidate, this is like icing on the cake. AND the guy seems to have a track record of following through!

Another Nurse4Dean!

Well, this is just the cat's meow! Just peachy! Been a nurse 35 years, and truly, in my heart, believed nurses were much smarter than this. I live to be almost retirement age to learn that nurses are just as susceptible to political rhetoric as these bumpkins down here in the South. Only difference is, some of you are not from here. Maybe your brains were frozen from too much snow up north or something.

"Why do people want to become nurses?" Dean asks.

;) "Because they want to help people"???? B___ s__t!

If all we wanted to do is help people, we'd go work for customer service at Sears! Or be a waitress at O'Charlies. But it sounds good, doesn't it? I contend most of us became nurses because we wanted a career that would give us a decent income, be fairly secure in the job market, and be not very difficult to obtain (after all, it isn't medical school, now, is it? Nor law school, nor accounting). I believe most of us wanted to be able to give our children more than WE had. That was why I became a nurse.

"Why do they leave the profession?" Dean says it's because they can't give patients the care that they know they need. B.S. AGAIN!

Rhetoric. It sounds good when you read it, unless you STOP AND THINK ABOUT HOW RIDICULOUS THAT REALLY IS!

:rolleyes: "I can't give my patients the care I know they need, so I'm quitting and giving them NO CARE AT ALL!" "There's too much paperwork, so I'm going to work selling used cars, where there's not so much paperwork. I can take care of people's mobility needs!"

I personally have quit the hospital and just teach now. Know why I quit? Not for any of the reasons Dean listed that all of you other nurses out there leave nursing. I quit because I'm 57 years old, and that's just too old to sling bedpans on the evening/night shift 365 days a year anymore. I can no longer stand on my feet for 8 to 12 hours, and I get sleepy and want to be in bed by 10pm. Plus, I hated the duplicate paperwork. I never minded documentation, but to have to document the same info in 4 or 5 different places was really a bit much! Also, I like to go to church on Sundays now, not to the hospital and work!

Don't get me wrong here... I DO think nurses hate paperwork. Is anyone out there a LTC nurse or a home health nurse? Just take a guess what the cost of the Medicare paperwork YOU have to do. I believe we could lower the cost of Medicare by 25% (that would be millions of dollars) if we reduced the paperwork to a reasonable level, and did not have dozens of levels of people checking, doublechecking, triplechecking, etc ad nauseum, if all the paperwork is done. GIVE ME A F____ING BREAK!!!! How much do you think...nationwide... Medicare money is spent on reviewers, managers, inspectors, etc.... not to mention printing the mounds of forms required by the system, and the space required to file all that stuff!

I DO agree with Dean that "Nursing is the heart of a health care system". I DO think we have a shortage of nurses actually working as nurses. And I DO think they need more pay and less physical labor. But I also have seen (over and over again) us "eat" our young. I have seen nursing supervisors who were not even janitor material, much less management material. But they had longevity, and loved to use their power. I have seen nurses cursed by doctors, and on more than one occasion have actually seen doctors throw things at nurses (charts, gloves, pens...).

So, yes... Dr. Dean can "talk the talk" because we are too dumb to understand that he knows how to use the "buzz-words" that make us wake up!

I loved and hated my nursing days. I loved working at Children's Hospital, until the preemie was brought in that had been fried in a frying pan by her daddy, "Because she wouldn't quit crying."

I loved home health, until the paperwork took two hours to complete on a 30 minute visit.

I loved LTC until the State couldn't find anything to complain about except "There's an odor in one of the patient's bathrooms."

And since I've shared all this with you, I'll tell you about the day I finally turned in my notice at the hospital.

The evening before, I had a patient go bad. We had a code, did resuscitate the patient, but had to wait almost an hour for permission to transfer the patient to ICU. In the meantime, I did manage to give my other 5 patients their hs meds (9pm) AND give a unit of packed cells to another patient while another nurse sat with the coded patient. I also did get off my 11pm shift at 1am, which was good, I thought. But THIS day, the next day, when I clocked in at 2:30, the supervisor told me she had had a complaint about the night before. She DID write me up because a doctor had made his rounds that morning and noticed that his patient's 9pm (stable) vital signs were not taken until after 11pm, and he wanted the nurse written up. Supv knew what our night had been like. I asked her what she would have done in my situation... leave the code, leave the hs meds, or leave the patient receiving blood, to go do vital signs on a stable patient. She said she would have done what I did, but she still had to write me up because the doctor said so.

THEN, after report, when I went into my first patient's room, and introduced myself, his reply was, "What are you smiling about? Do you see anything in here that's pleasant?"

I turned in my 2 week notice that same afternoon.

I never spent anywhere near 25% (much less 50%) of my time on non-nursing work (unless you count eating supper and going to the bathroom). Documentation is nursing work. Caring for patients (including baths, VS, bedpans, assisting in/out of bed and all the other not-so-fun work) is nursing work. So are the skill-based items (IVs, caths, treatments... wound care, assisting with central lines or thoracenteses etc, etc) just as much as medication administration, and so is stopping for a moment and talking with the patient. What's on her mind? Is she worried about her surgery? Maybe she's worried about who is taking care of her dog while she's sick. THAT'S nursing work too. Being sure my patient has a BSC... that's my patient, so that's nursing work too. Drawing blood... then getting the results... that's nursing work too.

Don't RHETORIC ME, Dr. Dean! I do not stand up and applaud every time a politician says "our children" or "world peace" or "our freedom" or any of the other high-profile buzz-words politicians use to trick the public into being like a deer in the headlights...

Furthermore...

You cannot ban mandatory overtime unless you want to make patient abandonment an OK thing to do!!

WAKE UP, PEOPLE!!!

I don't know about the whole country, but here in Alabama we have many more applicants for nursing school than slots available for them. I know people that have been told, "We have 200 applicants, but admit only 25 each semester." So they pick the 25 who scored highest on the NLN entrance exam. So what about the other 175? They'll probably go to LAW school and make a REAL living!~

Wake up, Dr. Dean... we already have flexible scheduling and part-time work... for those who want it. I've not even heard of a hospital in the last 10 years that would not welcome any and all flexipool nurses they can get! Read the nursing journals, or look in the wantads of any newspaper!

Do YOU??

Dean has integrity.

Look at his web site. All the issues that he has expressed views on are there in detail. It will take days to get through it all.

After you click on to issues and then picked an issue. Read it, but then look to the right side of the screen and there will be more links concerning that issue in more detail.

This isnt snowy but actually her husband. As I have only been a nurse for about 7-8 years or so I feel that I only have this small amount of time and experience to render an opinion regarding nursing and nurse matters, so here goes. Howard Deen, the physician, has a lot of lofty ideas regarding the nursing shortage. Education money, paying instructors more, federal subsidies for hospitals and clinics for clinical sights, and, dare I say, even medicare reimbursement for hospital nursing service. At the risk of sounding, well, realistic, does ANYONE believe that medicare is ever going to reimburse hospitals for nursing services? If they did manage to enact some kind of legislation to does this, does ANYONE believe that the hospital administration, who's sole concern is money, is ever going to "pass-on" this reimbursement to the nurses? For that matter, do you think nurses, except in a few instances, are ever going to collectively bargain for what they are entitiled to, wages, good medical insurance, retirement. Lastly, has ANYONE ever felt like any physician they were dealing with on a regular basis had the nurses best interest in mind when executing the duties of there practice. I say trust doctors to practice medicine not politics, as an out spoken critic of health care policy, I have been repeatadly exposed to high level decision making that clearly did NOT have the nurses best interest in mind. In fact, many adminstrator, some who happen to be physicians, execute policies that are directly contrary to the health and welfare of nurses, consequently resulting in a mass exodus of nurses from the field. Things like salery freezes, strike and union busting tactics, forcing the nurses, many of whom are the SOLE support of there families, to take up more of the health care premium costs, forcing nurses to take call and work overtime to keep there jobs, and paying "less than trade wages" so that many nurses both male and female will work 60-70-80 hrs a week to pay off school loans and provide a tolerable living for there kids. In short, I am very suspicious of ANY politician who says they want to help nurses and the patients they care for. If the money aint there, it aint gonna happen. Put up or shut up.

Respectfully submitted to the care takers of our profession

Robert J Conrad RN, ICU

And I agree with much of what you said. I AM glad to see some of our issues getting national recognition. We CAN thank Dr Dean for bringing this to the public eye, even if he doesn't tell the whole story.

I hope our so called nursing leaders use this to real nurses' advantage....but I am cynical regarding this. Our current nurse organizations seem to embrace the nurse executive line of thinking, which does not accurately reflect bedside nurses' concerns, IMHO.

Until nurses can effectively organize from a grass roots level, we will not likely see our concerns appropriately represented.

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