Florida Nurses Unite Feb. 16 to Demand Lifesaving Patient Safety Improvements
Media Availabilities in Fort Lauderdale, Orlando, Jacksonville, Tampa as Hundreds of RNs Travel to Tallahassee for Feb. 17 March and Rally for Safe RN-to-Patient Ratios
WHAT:
There will be media availabilities in Fort Lauderdale, Orlando, and Jacksonville Monday, February 16th as hundreds of registered nurses from across Florida will travel to Tallahassee to march, rally, and advocate for the new Florida Hospital Patient Protection Act of 2010, introduced by Rep. Oscar Braynon (D-Miami Gardens) and Sen. Tony Hill (D- Jacksonville). The Patient Protection Act will:
- Guarantee a safe ratio of RNs to patients on every unit in every hospital in Florida. Research has identified unsafe nurse staffing as a key cause of adverse events in units throughout hospitals.
- Establish whistle-blower protections for RNs who expose unsafe conditions
- Assure RNs the legal guarantee to serve as patient advocates
WHO:
The RNs are members of NNOC-Florida, the professional association and union for RNs. NNOC-Florida is the state chapter of the National Nurses Organizing Committee (NNOC) and is affiliated with National Nurses United, the new national union of RNs, founded in December 2009 and composed of 150,000 nurses from every state in the country, which has won accolades for its “Send a Nurse” to Haiti program. They will be joined by colleagues from SEIU Florida and the Florida Nurses Association.
DETAILS:
- Ft. Lauderdale: RNs will be available at the Ft. Lauderdale airport from 5:30 a.m. to 6:00 a.m. Monday Feb. 16. Contact: Louie Rada, (305) 812-4613
- Orlando: RNs will gather at the Fashion Square Mall, Panera, on Colonial Drive from 8:00 to 8:30 a.m. Monday Feb. 16. Contact: Maria Armesto at (352) 615-5564
- Tampa: RNs will gather at the Westshore Plaza on Westshore Blvd from 7:30 to 8 a.m. Monday Feb. 16. Contact: Beth Pease at (917) 603-0024
- Jacksonville: RNs will gather with Sen. West at the Jacksonville airport from 9:30 to 10:00 a.m. Monday Feb. 16. Contact: Liz Jacobs (510) 435-7674
- On Tuesday Feb. 17 these nurses will nurses will be among hundreds gathering in Tallahassee, marching from the Doubletree Hotel (101 Adams) at 9:00 a.m. to Kleman Park near the State Capitol for a 10:00 a.m. rally. Contact: Liz Jacobs (510) 435-7674
BACKGROUND on the Florida Hospital Patient Protection Act of 2010
Reflecting the hopes and dreams of nurses and patient—and the best scientific evidence—the Florida Hospital Patient Protection Act of 2010 will improve patient outcomes and draw nurses back to bedside by allowing them to practice their profession safely. The act will:
- Guarantee a safe ratio of RNs to patients on every unit in every hospital in Florida. Research has identified unsafe nurse staffing as the cause of many sentinel events for hospitals patients today.
- Assure RNs the legal guarantee to serve as patient advocates
- Establish real whistle-blower protections for RNs who expose unsafe conditions
The benefits of safe nurse-to-patient ratios for Florida hospitals:
Nurse-to-patient staffing in Florida hospitals is in crisis, with RNs juggling up to nine extremely ill patients at a time.
- Studies show that each additional patient an RN is assigned increases the risk of patient death by seven percent – Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, May, 2007.
- Increasing the number of full-time RNs on staff per day by one, there were nine percent fewer hospital-related deaths in intensive care units, 16 percent fewer in surgical patients, and six percent fewer in medical patients -- Healthcare Risk Management, February 2008.
- Cutting RN-to-patient ratios to 1:4 nationally could save as many as 72,000 lives annually, and is less costly than many other basic safety interventions common in hospitals, including clot-busting medications for heart attack and PAP tests for cervical cancer – Medical Care, Journal of the American Public Health Association, August 2005.
- There has been a 60 percent increase in state RN applications since a similar law was signed in 1999, suggesting its appeal to RNs – California Board of Registered Nursing.
- A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in October 2002 linked higher patient loads with a 15 percent increase in nurses’ dissatisfaction with their jobs.
- Cancer surgery patients are safer in hospitals with better RN-to-patient ratios. A study of 1,300 Texas patients undergoing a common surgery for bladder cancer documented a cut in patient mortality rates of more than 50 percent – Cancer Journal of the American Cancer Society.
Safe nurse to patient ratios are working across the country.
“I work in a medical unit where a majority of our patients are diabetic and require lots of teaching and monitoring. Our night-shift RNs used to have nine to 12 patients before the ratios were in effect. We could never keep a core nursing staff on nights. As a result of the ratio law we don’t have more than five patients, which gives us the time we need to do patient teaching and has dramatically improved patient outcomes and nurse retention. Before the ratios, with too many patients to safely care for, many nurses left the profession,” said Mary Bailey, RN, Medical Unit, Long Beach Memorial Hospital
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