Nurse Talk Blog | News

Kaiser Mental Health Caregivers Speak Up for Patients | CNA/NNU Sympathy Strike

September 22nd, 2011 by Nurse Talk

Mental health professionals at Kaiser Permanente speak out about understaffing at Kaiser and its impact on patient care, in advance of a statewide strike. Fighting the good fight. We applaud you for your sympathy strike support California Nurses Association and National Nurses United. This is a great video about why Kaiser health care workers are striking. We can all be agents for change. Money is not more important than people.

Kaiser Mental Health Caregivers Speak Up for Patients from Leighton Woodhouse on Vimeo.

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CNA Members: Rush to Final Weekend of ‘Let Me Down Easy’

September 2nd, 2011 by Nurse Talk

Berkeley Rep invites CNA members to save $5 on tickets for the final weekend of Anna Deavere Smith’s smash hit Let Me Down Easy! Anna set the Bay Area ablaze with Fires in the Mirror and Twilight: Los Angeles, and in recent years, you’ve seen her on The West Wing and Nurse Jackie.

With Let Me Down Easy, Anna explores the body and the body politic, a topic that will resonate with your dedicated work as health professionals. Final performances are tonight (Friday) at 8pm; Saturday at 2 at 8pm, and; Sunday at 2pm. To get your discount, you must call our Box Office at (510) 647-2949 between 12 and 7pm and identify yourself as a CNA member. No walk-ups – call now!

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Sept. 1 = 10,000 Nurses, 61 Events, 21 States, 1 Message…

September 1st, 2011 by Nurse Talk

This just in from our friends and National Nurses United. Pass it on to your friends and colleagues:

10,000 Nurses & Main Street Residents to Converge at 61 Congressional Offices in 21 States on Sept. 1 with 1 Message: Tax Wall Street to Heal America

RNs to sponsor soup kitchens, street theater, speak outs on the need for jobs, healthcare, education, housing – and outline plan to pay for it cite Wall Street contributions to legislators while home districts in crisis.

From the Atlantic to the Pacific, 10,000 nurses and community participants will join actions in 21 states Thursday, September 1 demanding action on the economic crisis to heal America. They will call on senators and Congress members in their local district offices Thursday  to pledge to “support a Wall Street transaction tax that will raise sufficient revenue to make Wall Street pay for the devastation it has caused on Main Street.”

National Nurses United say TAX WALL STREET in Times Square - NYC August 2011LEFT: National Nurses say TAX WALL STREET in Times Square – August 2011

Events, from soup kitchens to help feed the hungry, to community speak outs, to street theater are planned from urban centers like Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, and Orlando, to smaller towns, such as Corpus Christi, Texas, Marquette, Mich., and Dayton, Ohio. National Nurses United, the largest U.S. union of nurses, is sponsoring the actions. Creative events will include a town crier in Boston reading a litany of Wall Street transgressions against America, 8-foot tall puppets, and flash mobs.

Nurses will visit home offices of Republicans and Democrats, with a common message: American families are hurting, and they need jobs, healthcare, housing, quality education, nutrition, and a secure retirement.

In addition, the RNs will release data where available contrasting contributions the legislators have received from Wall Street with plummeting economic conditions in their districts that has left substantial numbers of their constituents in crisis.

Rep. Paul Ryan, for example, a Wisconsin Republican, has accepted $2,417,672 in campaign contributions from Wall Street financial institutions over the past 12 years as a champion for their interests. But the payoff has been small for his district, where 69,241 people are uninsured, 22,884 are dependent on food stamps, and 20,394 children and 7,939 seniors live in poverty.

Similarly, Sen. Michael Bennett of Colorado, a Democrat, has collected $2,409,806 campaign contributions from Wall Street interests while his state languishes in the top 10 for foreclosures, has 184,689 children in poverty, 116,941 people dependent on food stamps, and 13,390 homeless.

NNU will also be calling for the establishment of Main Street commissions to push real solutions for Main Street communities, such as the Wall Street financial tax, as a contrast to what NNU Executive Director RoseAnn DeMoro calls “the Wall Street ‘super committee’ set up in the recent debt ceiling deal whose main goal seems to be more cuts in programs that help people to funnel more resources to Wall Street and foreign banks and investors.”

“America’s nurses every day see broad declines in health and living standards that are a direct result of patients and families struggling with lack of jobs, unpayable medical bills, hunger and homelessness. We know where to find the resources to bring them hope and real solutions,” said NNU Co-president Karen Higgins, RN.

A tax on Wall Street trading of stocks, derivatives, currencies, credit default swaps, and futures – which many other nations have now adopted – could raise hundreds of billions of dollars to pay for programs that “are desperately needed to reduce the pain and suffering felt by so many who feel abandoned across this nation,” says NNU Co-President Deborah Burger, RN.

“It’s time for Wall Street financiers, who created this crisis and continue to hold much of the nation’s wealth, to start contributing to rebuild this country, and for the American people to reclaim our future,” says DeMoro.

The $2.4 trillion in government bailouts to financial and other institutions already spent, noted DeMoro, alone would have funded 63 million jobs at the national median level of about $39,000 a year. “Instead, we have over 25 million people who are unemployed or underemployed, and in the past decade U.S.-based corporations added 2.4 million jobs in foreign countries while divesting in America, cutting 2.9 million jobs in the U.S.”

“We need to reallocate the money back to our communities, and our actions on September 1 are going to raise the demand to a new level to heal our nation,” said NNU Co-president Jean Ross, RN.

View the List of Sept. 1 Nationwide Actions and Join Us

Upload & Share Event Videos and Photos @ ProtestInTheUSA.org

View our Multimedia News Release on PRNewswire

Learn More About the Main Street Contract for America

Can’t make an event?

Sign Our Virtual Petition

 

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National Day of ACTION – Sept 1, 2011

August 16th, 2011 by Nurse Talk

From our friends at National Nurses United

On September 1, nurses and communities in more than 60 cities across the nation will be hosting soup line actions to draw attention to the needs of Main Street, and to an NNU proposed transaction tax on Wall Street.

It’s already the law in a dozen other nations, including Great Britain and the world’s fastest-growing markets. NNU legislation is being introduced in Congress soon. Stay tuned!

For more information on our National Day of Action, contact your NNU rep or check the National Nurses United web site.

National Nurses United
8630 Fenton Street, Suite 1100
Silver Spring, MD 20910
www.NationalNursesUnited.org

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Pass the Barf Bag: Hospital CEO gets 6-figure payout amid bankruptcy filing

August 10th, 2011 by Nurse Talk

Thanks to the Minnesota Nurses Association for this post and link on their Facebook page:

Pass the barf bag: Hospital CEOs at “Nonprofit” Hospitals in the Midwest make an average of $481,000 in total pay. And when a N.J. hospital goes broke, the CEO gets a six-figure payout while the nurses’ pension goes unfunded.

The story reported at FierceHealthcare.com, says,

Thanks to lowered reimbursements, some struggling hospitals will be forced to shut their doors. Yet weeks before city-owned Hoboken (N.J.) University Hospital filed for bankruptcy, it gave its CEO a six-figure payout upon resignation, reports The Star-Ledger.

Former CEO Spiros Hatiras will receive $600,000 in compensation and full medical benefits for one year, although the organization doesn’t have enough funds to pay its $1.9 million in city-related bills or the $1.45 million it owes to employees’ pension and health funds, according to the article.

“Personally, I think it’s a disgrace that they are giving out a golden parachute while people like nurses are not getting paid,” said one of the most vocal opponents of the sale, Beth Mason of Hoboken City Council.”

Yeah, we do too.

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“This Is An Unsafe Place to Work and Management is Aware.” Insufficient Staffing May Be Factor In Patient Deaths

August 9th, 2011 by Nurse Talk

WGAL Channel 8 in Pennsylvania reported today that:

The state Health Department released a report on Carlisle Regional Medical Center that states insufficient staffing may have contributed to the deaths of two patients in June. One died after the patient stopped breathing during a CT scan and was not accompanied by a nurse because of low staffing, according to the report. Another patient died after waiting more than seven hours for a transfer to another hospital for heart surgery, according to the report. The report is based on an unannounced complaint investigation at the hospital that started on June 9 and ended on June 22.

A hospital schedule showed more than 200 nursing shifts were left empty in less than a one-month period. One employee told investigators, “We all fear for our jobs because corporate will fire at will with no reason.” Another worker said, “This is an unsafe place to work and management is aware.”

News 8 called hospital management for comment, but the call has not been returned.

Read more: http://www.wgal.com/news/28811606/detail.html:

THE EVIDENCE IS IN: RN-TO-PATIENT RATIOS SAVE LIVES

A major new study led by one of the nation’s most eminent nurse researchers provides compelling new evidence that California’s landmark RN-to-patient staffing law reduces patient mortality, assures nurses more time to spend with patients, and substantially promotes retention of experienced RNs. “This research documents what California RNs have long known – safe staffing saves lives. We see the effects every day at the bedside in improved patient care, an enhanced quality of life for patients, and nurses able to more safely practice the profession to which we have dedicated our lives,” said Malinda Markowitz, RN, co-president of the California Nurses Association, a National Nurses United founding affiliate.

Why aren’t we surprised? Tell us your stories. Visit National Nurses United’s web site. See what you can do to support safe staffing ratio legislation.

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Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid belong to you. Say “NO” to cuts.

July 14th, 2011 by Nurse Talk

Tell Congress: No Cuts to Social Security, Medicare, or Medicaid
Call Your Senators – National Call-In Days: July 14-15

As part of the negotiations to raise the national debt ceiling, Wall Street-funded politicians in Congress and the White House are proposing significant cuts to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. They want to:

Cut Social Security’s COLA – even though Social Security does not contribute one penny to the national deficit, and is financially secure for decades.

Raise the eligibility age of Medicare from 65 to 67 – threatening the health and lives of tens of millions of seniors and people with disabilities who are dependent on Medicare for health coverage.

Implement deep cuts in Medicaid funding, assisting the efforts of governors who have targeted Medicaid for state cuts and endangering tens of millions of Americans who count on Medicaid.

CALL YOUR SENATORS
1-866-251-4044 (toll free)

Tell them:

No cuts to Social Security, Medicare, or Medicaid. No cuts to Social Security’s COLA.No Social Security payroll tax holiday.

Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid belong to you – you pay for them in every paycheck. Don’t let them cut it or raid it.

What’s behind this attack?

The refusal of leaders of both parties to increase taxes on the wealthiest Americans and Wall Street – despite a huge decline in tax revenues from the top 1 percent of taxpayers and the majority of big corporations that evade taxes.Efforts to privatize Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid and raid these benefits for Wall Street banks, investment houses, and insurance companies. Those who created the economic crisis don’t need more handouts.

NNU has proposed an alternative. Tax Wall Street speculation to rebuild America. We need jobs, healthcare for all, education, and housing for our communities, not more tax breaks for Wall Street, or cuts to our most basic services.

Learn more about NNU’s Main Street Contract for the American People – a new direction that puts Main Street first and asks Wall Street to pay their fair share. We’re collecting stories about ordinary people facing extraordinary economic challenges – share your story, find us on Facebook, take the Main Street pledge, endorse the contract, and know that you and your family are not alone in these difficult times.

National Nurses United
8630 Fenton Street, Suite 1100
Silver Spring, MD 20910
www.NationalNursesUnited.org

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Stories from Main Street: “That could be me…

June 24th, 2011 by Nurse Talk

National Nurses United Executive Director, RoseAnn DeMoro recently called on RNs nationwide to share stories about how the economic crisis is impacting their lives at home, and in their hospitals and communities. Their heartfelt responses were deeply moving, some of which can be read on the NNU blog.

During a recent shift as a charge nurse I was happy to learn that one of the patients wanted to compliment her RN for the care she received. The patient, who was in her 50s, was eloquent and carried herself elegantly, shaking my hand when I entered the room. A former executive secretary for more than 30 years, she penned her comment card in a beautiful handwritten script. Later that shift, I realized that the patient was the same person I had seen on the boards two weeks ago but never met: a homeless woman. I would have never suspected that this former executive secretary with impeccable penmanship was the same homeless woman if it weren’t written right there in the charts.

The discovery brought me to tears. I went back to visit the patient and learn her story. It’s an all-too-common one: After losing her job, she lost her healthcare, then lost her home and her family. The face of homelessness in America has changed. We have prototypes in our heads of what homeless people should look like, but they look like you and me. Her story also struck a nerve for me because some years ago, after a back injury at work, my husband and I also struggled to pay $1,400 a month in COBRA premiums to maintain our health insurance while I was on medical leave. I was just crushed by this woman, thinking that could be me.

— San Bernardino, California

Share your story

Learn more about the Main Street Contract for America

 

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