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Michael Lighty Decodes California Props: Yes on 30, No on 32
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And speaking of politics — -oh, I don’t think we were speaking of politics — BUT let’s. Our guest this week is Michael Lighty. Michael is the Director of Public Policy for the California Nurses Association. He talks with us about the upcoming election and the high stakes in California with Propositions 30 and 32. Often times these propositions are written in such a way that they are very difficult to understand — or shall we say interpret. Michael helps decode and tells us why voting yes on 30 and no on 32 is important for nurses and patients. For more California voting information or a national voting guide visit nationalnursesunited.org. Read more…
RN Karen Higgins on What’s Up in DC and RN Karyn Buxman, Speaker. Author.”Freakin’Funny” | Show 310
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“Oh my there is so much happening in the news these days Dan,” says Casey. Dan responds with “lets see if we can RAP IT ALL UP Casey.” Well, you have to check it out..they do indeed RAP IT UP.
Obamacare, don’t you dare,touch my junk, its not fair,pat downs, radiation,don’t ask…don’t tell,debt panels, medicare,social security go to hell,unemployment, that’s OKbut don’t take my tax cuts away,people, people where does it go?the republicans got it…JUST SAY NO!
But, on to the real stuff. Casey and Dan have a great conversation with our friend RN Karen Higgins about the recommendations that came from the President’s Debt Reduction Panel. What Karen has to say is shocking, at the very least, and should make all of us stand up and take note. We are NOT in the business of spreading fear but we do want to shine the light on the continued assaults on the working class in our country. If you are a nurse—can you imagine working in the ICU or any other department in a hospital when you are 69 or 70? Think of what it takes to get through your shift now—when you are still physically strong—add a few years and who’s lifting who? Read more…
Fix Economy and Cut Deficit with Jobs, Healthcare for All
Following the adjournment of the President’s Deficit Commission, National Nurses United, the nation’s largest professional nurses’ union, called on Congress to fully scrap the deeply flawed recommendations of the panel’s co-chairs, and move forward with the urgent actions that will protect America’s nurses and working families.Such a plan would start with a new economic program to put people back to work, a point made more pressing by today’s latest disastrous employment numbers, extending benefits for the unemployed which puts immediate money into the economy, and genuinely cutting healthcare costs, by expanding Medicare to cover all Americans.“We need a plan for everyone, not just Wall Street, the banks, and their champions in Washington who seem to dominate the political debate,” said Deborah Burger, RN, co-chair of the 160,000-member NNU. “Congress and the White House should stop focusing on the agenda of Wall Street and financiers which mischaracterizes causes of the deficit – the Bush tax cuts, the endless wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the downturn in the economy – and advance the programs Americans need, such as stimulus spending.”“Nurses know that the ongoing explosion in healthcare costs is also a major source of the federal deficit, and the insecurity faced by millions of American families and patients,” said Burger. Read more…
Nurses make the difference in care
By Nita DollieslagerDaytona Beach News-JournalOctober 18, 2010I am a registered nurse working in this community. I am also part of the legislative efforts led by the National Nurses Organizing Committee of Florida. I support the Florida Hospital Patient Protection Act (known as HB 1283/SB 2316 in the 2010 legislative session) and ask that all residents of this community support it too.Research shows that increasing the number of full-time registered nurses on staff per day by just one resulted in 9 percent fewer hospital-related deaths in ICUs, 16 percent fewer in surgical patients and 6 percent fewer in medical patients (as reported in Healthcare Risk Management, Feb. 2008). Safe staffing ratios also help lower the incidence of some of the most-serious health issues facing seniors: pneumonia, stroke and hospital-acquired infections, to name a few.According to a Robert Wood Johnson study done in 2006, increasing the ratio of R.N.s to patients doesn’t just protect patient care and save lives, it results in a net decrease in cost to the hospital because of improved patient outcomes and reduced length of stay for the patient. It’s good for the economy overall.Reducing the number of patients and increasing our ability as nurses to advocate in the patient’s interest is the right thing to do. Read more…