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MNA: New 'State of Nursing in Massachusetts' Survey Strikes at Heart of Healthcare Crisis as Nurses Call Out Industry and State Officials for Failing to Address Worsening Patient Care Quality and Unsafe Staffing


80% of nurses say hospital care quality has deteriorated over the past two years; many nurses see vacancies remaining unfilled, increased use of travel nurses.

Four-in-ten nurses would not feel safe admitting a family member to the unit on which they work.

76% of nurses say Beacon Hill is not acting on unsafe staffing problems; Half say management does not adjust patient assignments as needed.

CANTON, Mass., May 6, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- As the nation kicks off National Nurses Week (May 6 ? 12) a newly released "State of Nursing in Massachusetts" survey provides a stark look at the worsening state of patient care and the lack of responsiveness by industry and state officials to nurses' concerns about unsafe patient assignments. The 2024 edition of the annual Beacon Research survey gives the public and healthcare stakeholders a view into the current crisis through the eyes of registered nurses. In addition to the release of the survey, hundreds of the state's RNs will be flooding the State House on May 8th at 10 a.m. to share their experiences with policy makers in the hopes of moving legislation to address the growing nursing/patient safety crisis.

"The public trusts nurses and nurses trust their own ability to work together to overcome the dysfunctions of our healthcare system," MNA President Murphy said. "The hospital industry must invest in the permanent nursing workforce. State officials must provide stronger protections for patients and nurses. Ignoring nurses' concerns has led us to this patient care crisis. Listening to nurses is the only way to solve our problems."

Workplace Violence a Major Concern

Study Shows Working Conditions and Failure to Address Them is True Cause of Staffing Crisis in Massachusetts

"Nurses are clamoring for real solutions to fix the awful conditions that are driving them away from the profession and leaving patients in unsafe, overcrowded environments," said Katie Murphy, ICU RN, and President of the Massachusetts Nurses Association. "Unfortunately, our annual survey shows that healthcare executives and state officials are failing to respond to nurses' concerns. Instead, the industry continues to move toward temporary, remote, and app-based approaches that nurses do not like and are bad for patient care."

>    Read "The State of Nursing in Massachusetts" Executive Summary.
>    See a visual representation in these survey charts.

Nurses' Real Solutions vs. Industry's False Answers

For "The State of Nursing in Massachusetts," more than 500 nurses were randomly selected for interviews from the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Nursing list, including 59% who were non-union nurses. The results clearly show solutions that nurses believe will help address the crisis, as well as industry-led approaches that will make it worse.

As part of the survey ? conducted between February 27 and March 11, 2024 ? nurses identified significant changes in their workplace over the past two years that have contributed to unsafe staffing and deteriorating patient care conditions.

Nurses came out plainly against app-based and remote nursing strategies in the survey.

Instead, nurses were in favor of state and industry officials addressing the patient care crisis through safer patient assignments, investments in the permanent nurse workforce, and improved hospital regulations.

The "Shortage of Nurses" Myth

In its most recent report on the subject, "Health Care Workforce Trends and Challenges in the Era of COVID-19," published in March 2023, the Health Policy Commission (HPC) concluded that the workforce challenges facing the healthcare system do not stem from a lack of nurses, but from an increasingly challenging work environment.

Nurses Seek Safe Patient Limits

In overwhelming numbers, nurses support a legislative solution that would develop a statewide maximum limit on the number of patients a registered nurse at Massachusetts hospitals can be assigned at one time.

The MNA and its State House partners filed new legislation this term entitled "An Act Promoting Patient Safety and Equitable Access to Care," sponsored by Sen. Lydia Edwards, D-Third Suffolk, and Rep. Natalie Higgins, D-4th Worcester. The bill would empower DPH to hold public stakeholder hearings and promulgate regulations that establish specific limits on the number of patients a registered nurse shall be assigned to care for at one time.

Nurses surveyed in 2023 supported the legislation by a wide margin. Seventy-six percent of all nurses said they strongly support this safe patient limits bill, and 12% somewhat support it.

Nearly every nurse (97%) surveyed with 0-5 years of experience said they "strongly support" the legislation.

"There is absolutely no question that limiting the number of patients a nurse cares for at one time is safer for patients and the only solution to the current nurse staffing crisis," said Murphy. "The benefits of safe patient limits were settled science before the pandemic, and today there is even more research and nurse experiences to support this legislation."

For more about the evidence behind safe patient limits, click here.

Nurses Are Under Assault, Seek Violence Prevention Legislation

A growing number of nurses fear violence in their workplace and view it as a serious problem, according to the 2024 "State of Nursing in Massachusetts."

Nurses have long been subject to more violence than any other profession. Nurses and nurses' aides were assaulted more than police officers and prison guards, according to a 2017 OSHA report. To combat this worsening problem, MNA nurses and healthcare professionals have proposed violence prevention legislation at the State House.

Last legislative term, Massachusetts senators and representatives passed similar versions of the MNA bill  ? An Act requiring health care employers to develop and implement programs to prevent workplace violence ? out of committee and to Ways and Means, the final stop before a full vote by the legislative bodies. The legislation, sponsored by Senator Joan Lovely and Representative Denise Garlick, would:

"Violence is a major contributor to burnout, is driving nurses away from the profession, and must be addressed more proactively in cooperation with staff nurses," said Karen Coughlin, RN, and chair of the MNA Workplace Violence and Abuse Prevention Task Force. "Patients deserve nurses who feel safe at work and are fully supported by their employer." 

MassNurses.org ? Facebook.com/MassNurses ? Twitter.com/MassNurses ? Instagram.com/MassNurses

Founded in 1903, the Massachusetts Nurses Association is the largest union of registered nurses in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Its 25,000 members advance the nursing profession by fostering high standards of nursing practice, promoting the economic and general welfare of nurses in the workplace, projecting a positive and realistic view of nursing, and by lobbying the Legislature and regulatory agencies on health care issues affecting nurses and the public.

SOURCE Massachusetts Nurses Association


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