Introduction
As of now, at least fourteen states across the country have legislations on safe staffing. Although California is among the fourteen jurisdictions, it is unique in the sense that its legislation includes a nurse to patient ratio clause. The allowed ration of patients to nurses is five to one. Half of the remaining states mandate hospital boards/ committees to set the nurse to patient rations in their hospitals, while five other states require hospitals to disclose their staffing ratios publicly (Abraham). Staffing ratios are important especially when the ratio is set by the state such as is the case in California.
This is because when states do not set standards as is the case in most states across the country, facilities usually get short-staffed. In other cases, nurses get overworked and exhausted leading to high staff turnover in health facilities, poor health outcomes, and compromised patient safety. A recent survey by Kronos Incorporated showed that nearly ninety percent of nursing staff want to leave their current work station because they feel they are overworked (Abraham). Other surveys and studies are showing that in places where nurses are way fewer than patients, patients are losing their lives especially in ICU wards.
Despite the clear risks and dangers of having more patients than available nurses can handle, hospitals and other health facilities are pushing back claiming that not enough studies support the need for them to employ more nurses. They also argue that not many nursing staff are available for hiring anyway so even if they decided to hire more people their argument is that they would not find enough people (Abraham). However, states are not relenting. More states have expressed their intention to set a standard ratio or at least to ask hospitals to disclose their nurse to patient ratios publicly. It is the argument of this paper that all states should use the California law as a model to set official nurse to patient ratios that should be strictly adhered to so as to avoid the many ills of having way fewer nurses than patients.
Proponents’ arguments
California enacted a state legislation in 2004 that in brief stated that for every five patients there should be one nurse. This law essentially set the limit. It necessitated more nurses to be employed to ensure that there are enough numbers to provide patients with the quality healthcare they need. Different limits were, however, set for different health facilities. For example, in an operating room, the ratio was set as one nursing staff per patient, while for psychiatric wards the ratio was set at one nursing staff for every six patients. Lastly, for emergency rooms and pediatric rooms, the limit was four patients per nursing staff (Terasawa).
It has been argued that the California state legislation improves health outcomes, is cost-effective, and has led to high turnover rates because of increased opportunities for nurses. It has also been argued by those who support the inclusion of the ratios in law that the annually increasing number of graduates will fill in the opening positions. In other words, highly skilled nurse graduates are helped to find work by the legislation, while shortages are also simultaneously filled by the nurses so they do not exist for long. Between 2004 and 2008, the vacancies for registered nurses reduced by sixty nine percent. This shows that no expected shortages were experienced after the enactment of the law and that vacancies have reduced courtesy of the fact that more nurses are filling in the opening positions faster (Abraham).
Proper staffing is important for the delivery of quality healthcare. Staffing levels should definitely...
Works cited
“Mandated nurse-to-patient staffing ratios in Massachusetts.” Massachusetts health policy commission, 2018. Web.
Abraham, Tony. “Fight for mandated nurse-to-patient ratios heats up.” HeathCareDive. 2018. Web.
Driscoll, Andrea, et al. "The effect of nurse-to-patient ratios on nurse-sensitive patient outcomes in acute specialist units: a systematic review and meta-analysis." European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing 17.1 (2018): 6-22.
Kim, Yunmi, Seon?Ha Kim, and Young Ko. "Effect of nurse staffing variation and hospital resource utilization." Nursing & health sciences 18.4 (2016): 473-480.
Lippincott Solutions. “Update on Nursing Staff Ratios.” 2018. Web.
Livanos, Nicole. "A broadening coalition: Patient safety enters the Nurse-to-Patient ratio debate." Journal of Nursing Regulation 9.1 (2018): 68-70. Web.
Nantsupawat, A., Kunaviktikul, W., Nantsupawat, R., Wichaikhum, O. A., Thienthong, H., & Poghosyan, L. (2017). Effects of nurse work environment on job dissatisfaction, burnout, intention to leave. International nursing review, 64(1), 91-98. Web.
Terasawa, Emi. California's minimum nurse-staffing law and its impact on hospital closure, service mix, and patient hospital choice. University of Pennsylvania, 2016. Web.
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