Nurse Staffing Shortages in the US
Gloria Wolfe, an RN in the Tampa Bay, Florida, area, told WFLA-TV she has cared for upwards of seven patients at a time and believes staffing shortages are impacting patient safety.
“How would you feel if your sister or brother or your husband or your wife or your child goes into a facility, and they’re like, ’I’m sorry, they acquired an infection here and the real reason is we couldn’t change that dressing in time because we didn’t have enough staff?’” she told the TV station.
And nurses at Florida’s James A. Haley Veterans’ Hospital were among the 160 workers who recently held a rally in opposition to what they believe is a hiring freeze, the “Tampa Bay Times” reported.
One nurse who spoke to the newspaper said the staffing shortages are putting patients at risk. However, hospital officials dispute the nurses’ stance, citing consistent growth and more than 100 nurses in “some stage of the hiring process.”
In New York, two senior officials at a VA facility were removed in connection with concerns about delayed care, WKBW reported.
“When you have less nurses and more patients…it’s a simple equation, there’s going to be negative consequences,” Katie Donovan, communication chair for National Nurses United, told the outlet.
On the other side of the country, Arrowhead Regional Medical Center (ARMC) nurses reported more 125 incidents of “unsafe patient care due to a lack of sufficient staff” at their California facility, according to IE Community News.
“Before the pandemic, we could get our ventilated patients up for walks. Now, due to staffing issues, our patients are weakening day-by-day as we don’t have the staff or resources, making it tougher to rehabilitate them,” Diana Lucatero, an RN who works in ARMC’s medical intensive care unit, told IE Community News.
US Research Supports UK Study
Studies conducted stateside years before the United Kingdom study support their findings. One of them, published in 2021, looked at patient-to-nurse staffing ratios in Illinois hospitals and discovered that if nurses in medical-surgical units cared for “no more than four patients each, thousands of deaths could be avoided.”
In touting the importance of safe staffing ratios, the New York Nurses Association cited several agencies and medical journals that argue better ratios result in improved patient care and fewer deaths, among other benefits.
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