On Mother’s Day, registered nurse Pauline Moe worked the night shift at Centerpoint Medical Center.
It was not a typical 12-hour shift. Not when she was responsible for 10 patients. She was overwhelmed that night.
Not often does she have 10 patients. Usually, it’s 8-to-1 on nights and 7-to-1 during the day shift.
“It was so detrimental to patient care,” Moe said.
Nurses United for Improved Patient Care, Local No. 5126 was formed last November to combat what Moe and other nurses go through when there’s a high ratio of nurses to patients and other workplace concerns for RNs.
Currently, the hospital and its owner HCA Midwest Health Systems, are in negotiations with the union to enter into a contract with its registered nurses at Centerpoint.
Negotiations started in February and the two have conducted 30 bargaining sessions, according to a written statement by Centerpoint.
Both parties have reached many “tentative agreements” regarding terms and conditions of employment. Additional sessions are scheduled for next month.
“It is Centerpoint Medical Center’s goal to develop a contract that meets the operational needs of the hospital and is reasonable and fair to our registered nurses,” according to the statement.
The union did a survey of nurses at the hospital. It found the top three priorities were wages, staffing and floating(transfereing nurses to different departments), according to union president and registered nurse Mary Nash.
Staffing is the No. 1 concern of those three, Nash said, if she was to prioritize them. Staffing is the reason why they started a grassroots campaign in 1999 to think about forming the union.
“It’s unsafe,” Nash said of overworked nurses “It’s unsafe for the patient and it’s unsafe for the nurse. That’s why errors happen.”
A law that went into effect this year in California mandates specific nurse-patient ratios that all hospitals in the state must follow. The ratios must be between 4-to-1 and 3-to-1, depending on the unit.
Under the new law, lives are being saved, the ability to be effective advocates for patients is stronger, and more RNs are entering the work force, according to an article on medicalnewstoday.com.
It’s legal for nurses in 49 states to be assigned 10 or even 15 patients at a time, far more than what is safe, according to the article.
Betty Blackmore, Centerpoint public relations director, said she couldn’t answer the question as to the hospital’s ratio of nurse to patients.