Every nurse has to decide whether to support mandated nurse-patient ratios or support the status quo. It's time to speak up for patient safety and nurse sanity.
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Ashley sank into a chair in the breakroom on her MedSurg unit in a large hospital in Florida. It was 0330, 8 ½ hours into her shift. She had not yet taken a break of any sort, including a bathroom or hydration break. In staff meetings, it was repeatedly emphasized never to miss a lunch break or stay overtime, but in the moment, it was hard to manage. Right now her stress was so high that as soon as she sat down, she struggled to keep back the tears.
Of her 7 patients, she had had two rapid responses (RRTs) and one patient was sent to ICU with sepsis. She was pretty sure she had missed the early signs of sepsis in her post-op patient, with an increased heart rate and infected wound. It's just that there was too much information and she was cognitively overloaded.
Her phone buzzed in her scrub pocket. Wearily she picked up the call. It was Laura, the charge nurse, sounding stressed out. "Ashley, I need you to take an ED admit in Room 4123. Is the room clean? Can you take report now, please?"
Across the country in California, Lindsay works on a similar MedSurg unit. Because she works in California, she can never be assigned more than 5 patients. Her day was busy and at times crazy. She knew that adding on 2 more patients would make it unmanageable. Thank goodness it was 5 patients, and not 7. During lunch breaks her patients were covered by break nurses and she did not take her phone into the breakroom.
Why is there such disparity? How is it that a patient with exacerbated CHF on Tele in Alabama has a nurse with five other patients and a patient with exacerbated CHF on Tele in California has a nurse with only 3 other patients?
The reason is that California has mandated nurse-patient ratios in every hospital unit. ICU is 1:2, SDU 1:3, Tele 1:4, Med Surg 1:5.
If you were a patient and could choose, would you choose a nurse who has 4 patients or 7 patients? If your baby was in NICU, would you want your child to have a nurse with 1 other infant, or 2 other infants?
There is abundant evidence to show that patients suffer when nurses have too many patients. The following is a quote from Ruth Neese's Talking Points for Safe Staffing.
Mandated nurse-patient ratios are a matter of public safety. There are regulated practice safeguards in place for airline pilots and truck drivers and other industries. Why not nursing?
Historically nurses are a silent workforce who have allowed employers to determine clinical practice. But that is changing. The time for change is now. On April 25th and 26th 2018, nurses around the country will gather in Washington D.C. for the 3rd annual rally to urge lawmakers to enact safe staffing ratios. In numbers, we have strength and will be acknowledged.
Come join allnurses in Washington DC! Meet up with the allnurses team who will be filming and interviewing, and myself, Nurse Beth! Dr. Laura Gasparis, whose conferences many of us ICU nurses have attended, is the lead speaker.
By standing together, we can bring about needed reform. Will you be a part and bring about change as the nurses did in California?
Be sure and read Male Nurse Disgusted by Female Nurses for a unique point of view on working conditions and ratios.
What else can you do? So many things!
Easily find out who your legislators are and make a call.
Write a letter to support H.R. 2392 and S. 1063 Nurse Staffing Standards for Hospital Patient Safety and Quality Care Act of 2017 legislative bills. Legislators respond to topics based on the number of phone calls and mail from their constituents.
While you are in Washington, make an appointment to see your legislator.
Share this article on social media. Use hashtags #NursesTakeDC and #allnursesSTRONG
Please watch the following video for more information on NursesTakeDC 2018. Like this article if it spoke to you, and comment below. Thanks much.
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Neese, R (2016). Talking points for Safe Staffing. Retrieved January 12018. Nurse Patient Ratios | Talking Points for Safe Nurse Staffing
My faciliity recently started working with a consultant. Ever since the first of the year in OR, our managers have been pushing us to send people home early every day. In PACU, the managers waltz thru repeatedly to see if we're busy. Sure, we may have 3 nurses sitting here, but there are multiple surgeries in process & we can't send people home to leave nurses taking multiple pts simultaneously. It doesn't work that way in our dept with 1:1 occasionally 1:2. OR staff has said it is the same for them with the charge told to send people home ASAP during the day.
The ratio changed for our pre-op dept & the manager is included in the numbers. How the heck does that help? Only on an absolute day from hell does she come in & help out with clerical things. It was hinted at that they are looking at moving towards pre-op nurses prepping 2 pts at a time. While that may not sound crazy if you don't work this dept, taking a pt off the street & getting them completely prepared in 90 minutes (or less) can be a race against time, especially if a nerve block will be done, nevermind difficult IVs, missing paperwork, drawing labs, EKGs, pre-op breathing tx, & educating the pt/family regarding the surgical process & post-op expectations.
We also have been informed that we will be crosstraining to another dept to do procedural sedation (& take call). Volunteers first; otherwise, we will be assigned.
I've also heard rumors that the floors have been changed to a 1:6 ratio for days.
I forsee a mass exodus soon.
The CA ratio law clearly defines tele and Stepdown: tele is stable cardiac pts (1:4). SDU is those in between icu and med/surg. They are unstable often and stable to unstable - requiring 3:1 ratio.
I work in CA on a very busy "telemetry" floor. This hospital has no "step-down" officially: just icu, tele, and med/surg units.
Does that mean we have no "step-down" patients? DEFINITELY NOT! Where are they housed? Telemetry.
My floor retains the title "Tele" so its abiding by a 1:4 ratio but with very heavy "stepdown" pts with tele pts sprinkled in.
So here its a fixed ratio where the acuity definitions are vague so the hospital is skirting around the legal expectations.
Everyone feels the stress and burnout is palpable right now.
kaylee. said:The CA rario law clearly defines tele and Stepdown: tele is stable cardiac pts (1:4). SDU is those in between icu and med/surg. They are unstable often and stable to unstable - requiring 3:1 ratio.I work in CA on a very busy "telemetry" floor. This hospital has no "step-down" officially: just icu, tele, and med/surg units.
Does that mean we have no "step-down" patients? DEFINITELY NOT! Where are they housed? Telemetry.
My floor retains the title "Tele" so its abiding by a 1:4 ratio but with very heavy "stepdown" pts with tele pts sprinkled in.
So here its a fixed ratio where the acuity definitions are vague so the hospital is skirting around the legal expectations.
Everyone feels the stress and burnout is palpable right now.
Exactly, this happens in many Calif hospitals. I have seen patients that should have been in stepdown and even ICU on Med-Surg floors in order to keep with the ratios, bad practice and unsafe, but admin doesn't care cuz its all about the money. Also, nurses working with less staff (CNA, sec etc.) to make up for the increased costs of ratios.
beekee said:And let's not forget the nursing assistants. If we get these types of ratios, they'll cut the NAs and we'll be responsible for total care. With the acuity levels we see, that's neither safe nor reasonable.
This!!!
I'm in CA, and while I appreciate the fact that my state has excellent RN:Pt ratios, I've seen and experienced admin getting rid of all ancillary staff. No CNAs, still no 15 minute breaks, addditional charting checklists, etc.
Ding ding ding! we have a winner here. This is PRECISELY the reality in California. Don't let anybody tell you otherwise. The number crunchers like their 20% profit increases YOY.
They give you NOTHING for nothing. In fact, the admins make it worse when the RNs have a bit of leverage like ratios.
Where I came from, we had 4:1 voluntarily. When a few bad things happened, we voluntarily switched to 3:1 with each of us covering for the other for lunches. It worked. I came to California and it's mandatory ratios...4:1....and I haven't met a tech YET. No CNAs. Period. I am overwhelmed with tasking...keeping my room stocked adequately (in the ER, that's just not possible for the RN to do, in a Level 1), doing my own EKGs, doing my own fingersticks (sometimes q15 for hours on end)...escorting patients to the restrooms...etc....I dream of my old place as if it were heaven.
You all have to understand something. The hospital WILL MAKE UP FOR THAT extra nurse or the time off the floor...they will get their pound of flesh. Don't fool yourself.
Nursing as a whole has a serious problem. We are a liability on the balance sheet of the hospital, ergo we have to justify our existence at every turn. Ever do your own 19 page evaluation arguing why you shouldn't be let go? I have. Every year. But when I was working in a different role, where that department was a money maker...you betcha we made more than RNs, we got our full hour lunch with no phones, and 8 hour shifts going home on time. I worked with patients, and it was no different. We just made money for the hospital instead of took it, like I do as a Nurse.
That's how number crunchers see us, folks. We are a liability financially...and when we make an innocent mistake that costs them money....watch out. Charting isn't about documenting the progression of a patient, what works and what doesn't. It's about risk management. How to make sure the hospital doesn't get sued. Period. They couldn't give a rat's rump what is going on with the patient, all they care about is getting paid and how to keep that revenue.
As soon as RNs understand that this is a war between those who would profit from a patient's misfortune and those who want to ease suffering for it's own sake, the better off you'll be.
Ratios are not a panacea. California ROUTINELY defies all laws regarding these rules. Ask anybody from St. Joes in Stockton. Ask how many have ancillary staff to help do ANYTHING, EVER. Ask how many call outs there are. Ask about the real morale. Californian RNs are just as miserable as everyone else, it just manifests in a very passive aggressive way...they're stuck with astronomical living expenses and some can't get out because of family ties. They don't say a word because they know if they do, if they complain to the unions, they'll never work again in this state.
It's the same across the board, the hospitals are interested in their stockholders or answer to the taxpayers. Either way, the heavy handedness is not going to change just because you have fewer patients...they will make up for that in a way that can make your job much harder than you know.
Just a crazy thought here and maybe I'm going all Conspiracy Theorist crazy, but I'm gonna throw it out:
What if the animosity and discontent between nurses about the ADN/BSN bulls*** issue is a brilliant distraction created by the hospital and health care lobby to keep us all off balance and at each other's throats so we don't organize and go after safe staffing and patient care issues?
I mean...crazy right? But imagine if we all banded together and said, "We ARE nurses! We will advocate for our patients and we stand together." What then?
Nunya, BSN
771 Posts
While I have thought about taking an ED or med-surg job so I can understand more about my elderly mother's care when hospitalized, I look at these posts and realize I can't and won't do it. I'm looking for a NICU job again, where the patient-nurse ratios are reasonable and doable. Even the busiest days in a level 2 or 3 NICU don't seem as bad as med-surg.