Just Say “NO” to Nurse Staffing Laws

Mandated nurse-patient ratios may be saving lives, but at what cost? This article presents evidence against the idea of nurse staffing laws. If you feel strongly about the topic, give this a read and weigh in. I’d love to have your opinion on the subject. Nurses General Nursing Article

  1. Were you taught about safe staffing laws in nursing school?

    • 64
      Yes
    • 165
      No
  2. Do you work in California?

    • 28
      Yes
    • 201
      No
  3. Have you ever been asked to take on more patients than you thought you could handle safely?

    • 199
      Yes
    • 30
      No
  4. Do you think safe staffing laws are a good idea?

    • 217
      Yes
    • 12
      No

230 members have participated

You’ve worked on a busy Med Surg unit for almost a year now. You were so excited to be hired right out of nursing school to the day shift, but it’s been so much harder than you ever thought it could, and so different from what you expected. It only took a few days to discover that no one does anything like they taught you in nursing school, there’s just no time. Recently you’ve been cringing every time your phone buzzes, worried it’s the nurse manager asking you to come in for an extra shift. It’s so hard to say no. You want to be a team player, but you’re just so tired. You’ve been wondering if you’re cut out to be a nurse, but maybe this is just how it is. Today is your fourth day in a row. You arrive on the unit to discover that not one, but two nurses have called in sick, and one of your nurses is a floater from labor and delivery. Normally you have five patients, but today you see with a sinking heart that you’ve been assigned seven. You sit at the computer next to your nursing mentor, trying to wrap your brain around your day, trying not to cry. He’s a good nurse and seems to notice everything. He turns to you and says, “Are you okay?”

You point at the seven patients on your computer screen and reply, “How can this be safe? How can they do this to us…to our patients?”

He says, “It’s a right to work state, and the hospital can do whatever they want.”

You say in disbelief, “So there’s no law against this? There’s no maximum number of patients we can be assigned? They could give us twenty next time?”

He shakes his head ruefully and says, “Medicare has guidelines for patient ratios, but this hospital has never followed them and we’re still running.” He looks over his shoulder before he turns back to you and says under his breath, “We shouldn’t talk about this at work, but there’s a group you can join to fight for safe staffing laws. Check it out when you get home, it’s called NursesTakeDC. It’s a dot org. But don’t talk about it here, you could get in big trouble.”

Mandated Nurse-to-Patient Ratios

Does this conversation seem familiar? Have you ever felt like you were working in unsafe conditions and wondered, “Isn’t there a better way?”

As a patient safety specialist, I’ve always been a huge advocate for safe staffing laws as a solution to so many of the problems nurses face. But, then I read a recent article, Why mandated nurse-to-patient ratios have become one of the most controversial ideas in health care and I had to give my position a second look.1

How Can There be Controversy Over Something So ... Obvious?

Opponents say ratio laws would exacerbate nursing shortages across the country, limit access to care, and take important staffing decisions out of the hands of nurses. Danny Chun is a spokesperson for the Illinois Health and Hospital Association (IHHA), a leading advocacy group for hospitals. He states that safe staffing laws are “a deeply flawed, inflexible, rigid approach to setting staffing levels that do not improve quality, safety or outcomes, but in fact would adversely affect patients.”1

The IHHA is against the Safe Patient Limits Act, a bill recently introduced in Illinois (House Bill 2604, Senate Bill 1908). Under the Safe Patient Limits Act, no nurse working in a hospital could be responsible for more than four patients at a time. The ratio would be even lower for special units like L&D, ICU and the ER. If passed, any facility that fails to comply could receive a fine of up to $25,000 per day.

Critics of the bill say that the consequences could be catastrophic, causing shortages of nurses and money. There may be increased wait times for patients in the ER, and hospitals may have to turn away patients because they don’t have enough nurses to meet the ratios. In addition, an unexpected influx of patients due to epidemics, mass shootings or other disasters could make it impossible to meet the ratios. Small hospitals operating in regional areas could be forced out of business. Chun says in Illinois, “more than 40% of hospitals across the state are losing money or barely surviving.” The cost to the hospital could be passed on in the form of higher healthcare costs.

The biggest criticism being offered is that mandated ratios don’t work. Chun says, “The evidence is not conclusive that ratios improved quality, safety or outcomes,”1

The Evidence

Here is where I get excited. I went to Google Scholar and typed in “Safe Staffing Laws, nursing” and got 44,400 hits. I love digging into the research to find the truth (like the X-files, the truth is out there…) I found multiple review articles that speak to the state of the science on safe staffing ratios. One by Olley (2017) suggests that there is a significant research gap to support claims of increased patient safety in the acute hospital setting with improved ratios (for all the REST of the evidence, check out my Just say "YES" article on this topic).2

California is the only state in the union with a safe staffing law. AB 394 was passed back in 2004 after a massive effort by the California Nurses Union. The result of the bill is that nurses in California have approximately one less patient than the national average. Multiple studies have shown that the standard mortality rate decreased by more than 33% after the enactment of the bill.3

This seems like pretty good evidence…evidence that the law that California enacted is working in California. See where I am going here? The biggest criticism of bills in other states (and this comes from organizations like the American Nurses Association) is that there is no empirical evidence supporting specific ratio numbers. Passing legislation without sufficient evidence is potentially dangerous since legislation is difficult to change. Critics say the laws currently proposed also don’t take into account nurse education, skills, knowledge and years of experience. In Bill 394, only 50% of the mandated nurses must be RNs. Some say these laws ignore patient acuity, required treatments, length of stay, team dynamics, environmental limitations, variations in technology and availability of ancillary staff. And last but not least, these laws are inflexible and don’t allow for the changing needs of patients.4

The Bottom Line $$$

The mortality rate may have decreased, but the finances are problematic. To meet mandatory staffing ratios, hospitals in California have had to cut funding for supplies, upgrades and education and holding patients longer in the ER. The result is increased economic costs for employers, with the unanticipated side effect of an increased workload for nurses in non-patient tasks as ancillary staff are dismissed. 4 & 5

The PRO Side

I’m not actually telling you to say “NO” to mandatory staffing laws. I want to get a conversation going, so please comment! To learn more about Nurses Take DC and what you can do to make a difference, take a look at my second article on the topic. Most importantly, before you speak up about safe staffing laws, make sure you are knowledgeable on the topic. We must be well educated on all sides of a topic if we want to weigh in on shaping the future of patient care.

References

Why mandated nurse-to-patient ratios have become one of the most controversial ideas in health care

Systematic review of the evidence related to mandated nurse staffing ratios in acute hospitals.

Statewide and National Impact of California’s Staffing Law on Pediatric Cardiac Surgery Outcomes

Effects of Public Reporting Legislation of Nurse Staffing: A Trend Analysis

Mandatory Nurse-Patient Ratios

Specializes in ICU.

I have considered this issue from multiple angles again and again. Having worked in staffing (direct care) as well as leadership roles (manager/director), I fully support legislated action to FORCE mandated ratios.

I have seen the evils for-profit healthcare can do to the bedside RN. Ratios are unheard of. As a manager, I vividly remember the shift in which I was in staffing with THREE acutely I’ll ICU patients (two vented and the third one who should have been).

and sorry, the arguments about supplies be d****d. Cut the overhead and supplies will still find their way. Perhaps the senior leadership bonuses should be reduced instead.

Specializes in Transitional Nursing.

The problem is that facilities aren't going to reach into their pockets and provide better staffing if they aren't incentivised to do so.

Nursing should be billed separately, but it's not.

The fines proposed would indeed be pretty steep, but there wouldn't be longer wait times because nurses would go on and take more patients (like we do now) thus, triggering the fine. ( which honestly I don't really have an opinion about)

If nurses had fewer patients we could actually do the things we were taught to do. Hospital acquired infections would go down because we'd be able to catch things before they become problems, take all the time required to maintain asepsis, etc.

Patients would have better outcomes. We could educate until they understand. We could identify barriers they are likely to encounter at home and limit the re-admission risk.

So many of the above would result in fewer penalties for the hospitals, but even just explaining it the way I'm trying to has never so much as raised an eyebrow.

I don't see how to improve staffing without a law stating they have to do it.

Specializes in Retired.

Hire enough nurses and just deal with it. I'Vve seen so much crap hospitals buy that never got used in the OR. Eventually hospitals will become dangerous places after the entire staff becomes burnt out and the suicide rates continue to climb. There's still a small country of patients every day having useless procedures and we're OK with that because the MD's are making money for themselves and the hospitals they work for.

Specializes in ACNP-BC, Adult Critical Care, Cardiology.
13 hours ago, SafetyNurse1968 said:

Opponents say ratio laws would exacerbate nursing shortages across the country, limit access to care, and take important staffing decisions out of the hands of nurses.

These have not happened at all in my experience working in California for the last 10 years and comparing that to the previous 14 years I worked somewhere else. There is no nursing shortage in California and every major metro area has a surplus of nurses so much so that new grads are having a tough time finding their first hospital job.

Perhaps not as a consequence of AB 394, but access to care has not been affected because hospitals are not closing left and right. Even those hospitals struggling financially are still around. I attribute this to California's regulatory environment that allows the state to step in when safety net healthcare institutions are threatened to close.

If anything, the ratio law makes nurses involved and in charge of staffing decisions and not administrators and to an extent, us providers. Yes, it's important to place a patient in the right level of acuity. i.e., ICU should be reserved to true ICU patients and step down must be used appropriately.

I have witnessed how nurses themselves contribute to decision-making in how transfers to specific hospital units are made not just based on medical necessity but the care burden the patient will present to the nursing staff's skillset.

I feel like your article actually supports the need for safe staffing laws. Yes, they possibly could create more wait times, nursing shortage, and more cost. Well that is how our healthcare system is currently set up! The burden of those issues should NOT rest upon the shoulders of RN's. Why should we be required to sacrifice the safety of our patients and our own licence?

On another note, I work in California and I must say, there is no shortage of nurses here.

Specializes in ICU, trauma, neuro.

Safe staffing laws should be seen as the "bare minimum". I work for an HCA facility where profit dominates every aspect of care no corner will be spared in the name of maximizing profit. Even here (where ratio laws do not exist) nutrition and housekeeping have been outsourced with benefits eliminated, wages cut, and safety standards (for these workers) compromised. The fact that HCA continues to operate (presumably at a profit since HCA will not do anything not profitable for very long) in California where strict staffing laws do exist supports the thesis that such laws can coexist with profitability. When, nurses are "pushed" by unsafe staffing they tend to go into triage, "survival mode". Assessments get minimized, medications missed (or worse given wrongly), labs missed, physical changes relevant to life and death missed essentially more people die or suffer greater morbidity than would otherwise be the case. I believe that nurses and nursing organization(s) should use several approaches to increase safe staffing laws:

a. Go directly to the public with ad campaigns that present the "California" case for safe staffing (reduced mortality). Also, large ad buys that ask the question "is your local hospital staffing placing your loved one at risk,?".

b. Work with large attorney firms to bring class action law suits against organizations and hospitals that oppose them (even if they lose the mere threat of loss may be sufficient to promote action). Deaths that occur in facilities with unsafe staffing should be treated as "prima facia" evidence of substandard care until proven otherwise. Meeting minimal staffing guidelines would serve as a "safe harbor" against the presumption of negligence which would otherwise exist in the absence of such staffing. Only when unsafe staffing costs "big business" hospitals more than it saves will change occur. According to the current "business calculus" many hospitals would rather pay off law suits with five million, if it saves them 20 million. Never mind the lives of patients, or the careers of nurses (and even doctors and administrators) that are burned in their unholy pursuit. The thinking goes that with the money saved they can just hire more nurses, doctors, managers, and other staff. We are seen as fuel to fire the furnace of profit the cost of doing business as it were.

Specializes in Oncology, Home Health, Patient Safety.
20 hours ago, Jedrnurse said:

Irrespective of the issue, I'll take a guess that you no longer do direct care nursing. People that are presently and directly impacted by the issue at hand (unsafe assignments) have more "skin in the game" and may argue differently.

More important, if you don't favor legal ratios, what are your proposals to deal with the problem? Please don't suggest committees...

No, no committees. I've always been a HUGE advocate for safe staffing ratios. I wanted to be sure I had explored all sides of the issue before really going all in so I wrote this piece from another viewpoint to make sure I understand all sides of the issue. My conclusion? As always, in healthcare, it's about $$$$. Thank you so much for reading and commenting. I hope you'll read part 2. I'll post the link here when it comes out.

Specializes in Oncology, Home Health, Patient Safety.
8 hours ago, Glycerine82 said:

The problem is that facilities aren't going to reach into their pockets and provide better staffing if they aren't incentivised to do so....

I don't see how to improve staffing without a law stating they have to do it.

I think you are 100% correct. It's truly unfortunate that hospitals can't seem to put patient and nurse safety first without being forced to. I hope when we finally get some laws on the books that nurses will have played a major roll in writing them. My concern is that we not create short-sighted policies that will end up causing more problems.

8 hours ago, Undercat said:

Eventually hospitals will become dangerous places...

Thanks for commenting - we are already there. Hospitals are not safe despite nurses best efforts. I write about this topic all the time!

Specializes in Oncology, Home Health, Patient Safety.
7 hours ago, juan de la cruz said:

These have not happened at all in my experience working in California for the last 10 years and comparing that to the previous 14 years I worked somewhere else. There is no nursing shortage in California and every major metro area has a surplus of nurses so much so that new grads are having a tough time finding their first hospital job.

Perhaps not as a consequence of AB 394, but access to care has not been affected because hospitals are not closing left and right. Even those hospitals struggling financially are still around. I attribute this to California's regulatory environment that allows the state to step in when safety net healthcare institutions are threatened to close.

If anything, the ratio law makes nurses involved and in charge of staffing decisions and not administrators and to an extent, us providers. Yes, it's important to place a patient in the right level of acuity. i.e., ICU should be reserved to true ICU patients and step down must be used appropriately.

I have witnessed how nurses themselves contribute to decision-making in how transfers to specific hospital units are made not just based on medical necessity but the care burden the patient will present to the nursing staff's skillset.

Thank you so much to all the California nurses who have commented! I was really hoping you would read my article. From what I've seen written, it looks like your staffing law is working well for you.

Specializes in Oncology, Home Health, Patient Safety.
15 hours ago, klone said:

OP, I think you are confusing the terms "right to work state" and "employment at will". Or, at least, the fictional nurse mentor at the beginning of the article is confusing them.

Thanks for clarifying. Though I'd love to blame my error on a fictional nurse, it is entirely my mistake. Here's a link with more info: https://work.chron.com/compare-right-work-employment-1927.html

"Right-to-work laws are state laws that dictate whether employees must join a union. The employment at will doctrine refers to firing people who don't have an employment contract."

Specializes in Mental Health, Gerontology, Palliative.

Dont say no to safe staffing laws. I'm actually gobsmacked that this point even needs to be debated by nurses with hands on patient contact

The idea that safe levels of nursing staff will some how eat into important things like supplies is an absolute red herring IMO that needs to be pureed and chucked in the rubbish

I've worked in acute surgical, the most I've ever had to take was a load of five, one of those was a patient who was a late admission and went to surgery for the most of the remainder of my duty.

I currently work in acute mental health, an average shift is between 2-3 patients, on a worst day I have four.

I can categorically say in both places I have access to all the supplies, supplementary services that are needed to safely provide nursing care.

IMO the arguments against set nursing ratios are provided by administrators and bureaucrats who are looking to trim the fat in any way possible. If something goes wrong with patient care, those same administrators wont hesitate to throw the nurse and any staff involved under the bus

Specializes in Cardiology.

Of course administrators dont want safe staffing. It would mean they would have to hire more staff which in turn would cut into their salaries and bonuses.

To somehow think that having safe, adequate staffing is harmful is ridiculous. It never ceases to amaze me how administrators forget where they came from. If you look into the background of a lot of these administrators they either have never worked the floor or they did the absolute bare minimum of time on the floor before entering management.