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Thousands of NYC RNs picket, claim 'staffing levels not safe'

by Lauren Dubinsky, Senior Reporter | April 16, 2015
Risk Management
NYC RNs picketing outside of
NewYork-Presbyterian Columbia
University Medical Center
Courtesy of NYSNA
Kathy Santoiemma joined thousands of other New York City registered nurses Thursday, walking picket lines in front of hospitals across the city protesting a workload that they claim threatens patient care.

“It causes a lot of frustration on the part of the nurse but it also causes a lot of problems with the patients — all of the studies show and it’s common sense that if you have fewer patients then you can do a better job with your patients,” said Santoiemma, who works at Montefiore Medical Center, told DOTmed News.

Santoiemma and her fellow registered nurses at times have to care for up to nine patients at once. Her hospital also cut the nursing assistant and unit clerk staffs so those additional responsibilities now fall on the nurses’ shoulders.

Thursday's protest marked a major effort to create awareness about the current nurse staffing crisis at the city’s hospitals, said protestors. As part of an informational picket, the nurses held signs and handed out literature to the community in hopes that they will contact the hospital CEOs and demand safer staffing.

To date, 14 hospitals around the city are affected by this issue and some require the nurses to care for ten or more patients at one time. “As nurses we are patient advocates and every day we strive to give patients optimal care but we are stretched to our limits between all of our patients and they are not given the full attention they deserve,” said Diane Minett, RN at Staten Island's Richmond University Medical Center.

Hospitals don’t want to be told what staffing levels should be, said Tara L. Martin, a spokesperson for the New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA). “They want to arbitrarily, from time to time, increase staffing when they want, and decrease staffing when they want — and that’s not safe,” she said.

The NYC Hospital Alliance, a multi-employer bargaining group that consists of The Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai St. Luke’s, Mount Sinai Roosevelt, Montefiore Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, is currently in the process of negotiating a collective bargaining agreement between the hospitals and NYSNA to address wages, benefits and management, and union matters.

In response to Thursday's rallies, the alliance said, "NYSNA's insistence on rigid staffing ratios is not the way to improve patient care. Nor is there a shortage of nurses currently, as the hospitals that make up the Alliance have collectively hired 1,000 additional nurses since the last contract was signed. In a changing health care landscape that requires flexibility and a team-based approach, staffing levels and assignments must remain the responsibility of hospital management."

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