09.18.2007
Advocates
for Patient Safety Rally on the South Coast
Urge lawmakers to pass bill that will improve patient
care, set safe RN-to-Patient Ratios
Fall
River, MA—Advocates for patient safety from across
the South Coast region launched a campaign within the region today
to urge lawmakers to pass legislation that will improve the quality
of patient care and set limits on the number of patients a hospital
nurse can care for at one time.
Standing
outside Saint Anne’s Hospital in Fall River, advocates from
the Coalition to Protect Massachusetts Patients spoke out about
the dangers of understaffing at area hospitals, and called on
elected leaders to pass The Patient Safety Act: House Bill 2059.
The bill calls on the state’s DPH to set a safe limit on
the number of patients a nurse is assigned to care for at once.
It also bans the dangerous practice of mandatory overtime, and
includes initiatives to increase nursing faculty and nurse recruitment.
“No
father should have to experience the pain of losing a child, as
I have,” said John McCormack, co-chair of the Coalition
and author of ‘Taylor’s Law,’ named after his
13-month-old daughter, who died as a result of a preventable medical
error. “Every single day in the commonwealth, six people
die needlessly of hospital-acquired infections. Safe staffing
will save lives, provide better patient care, and prevent medical
errors. I urge the Legislature to pass the The Patient Safety
Act, and to pass it now.”
The
hospital industry is trying to derail The Patient Safety Act,
putting thousands of patients’ lives at risk. Understaffing
leads to higher incidences of hospital-acquired infections, resulting
in 2,000 deaths a year, an increased rate of medical errors and
increased readmissions.
Joan
Pingley of the Bristol County Chapter of the Massachusetts Senior
Action Council also spoke out in favor of the measure, saying,
“Senior citizens spend more time in the hospital than any
other group, so we experience the devastating effects that overworked
nurses can have on the quality of care we receive on a regular
basis. It’s not just seniors who are endangered. Everyone
is at risk for hospital-acquired infections—a deadly but
preventable outcome of understaffing. Senior citizens of Bristol
County urge the Legislature to pass The Patient Safety Act and
save lives today.”
Angelena
DeLima, a member of the Coalition for Social Justice and the family
member of a patient who suffered substandard care at a local hospital,
shared her experience, stating, “We watched day after day
as my aunt’s nurses struggled to provide the care she needed
and deserved. We watched mistakes being made, not because these
nurses did not care, but because they were running themselves
ragged, caring for far too many patients. On one occasion, my
aunt, who was in the hospital with severe respiratory disease,
went without her desperately needed oxygen because the nurse had
not been to the room in hours to change the tank. In essence,
my aunt was left to suffocate for lack of nursing attention.”
“Every
day that goes by without passing The Patient Safety Act is another
day that patients suffer, contract infections and fail to receive
the quality of care they need and deserve,” said Karen Higgins,
a registered nurse from Boston Medical Center and co-chair of
the Coalition. “Bedside nurses are overworked trying to
tend to the needs of too many patients. We know that implementing
safe staffing will improve patient safety.”
Melinda
Cabral, a local educator who administers a preschool program,
commented on the need for safe staffing limits to protect children
in hospitals. “For preschoolers in daycare, there are strict
teacher-to-pupil ratios to ensure quality education and child
safety. But I was blown away to learn that if one of our preschoolers
suffers an injury or illness and needs to be hospitalized, when
that child gets to the hospital there is no law to protect him
or her?no limit on the number of sick children his or her nurse
will be forced to care for,” Cabral said. “Where is
our concern for quality health care and safety for our kids, and
for all of us, in hospitals when we are at our most vulnerable?
It makes me ask, where are our priorities?”
In
May 2006 the Massachusetts House of Representatives passed similar
legislation by a margin of 133 to 20 but the bill was not taken
up by the Senate. The Patient Safety Act: House Bill 2059 is co-sponsored
by State Senator Marc Pacheco (D-Taunton) and State Representative
Christine Canavan (D-Brockton).
To
date, 124 of the state’s leading health care and patient
advocacy groups have endorsed H.2059 and have joined forces to
push for passage in both the House and Senate. Recent voter surveys
indicate that more than 80 percent of the public supports establishing
safe staffing limits.
Advocacy
groups in the South Coast region participating in the campaign
include the Massachusetts Senior Action Council, Bristol County
Chapter; the Coalition for Social Justice; and the Coalition Against
Poverty. As part of the effort, advocates will mobilize local
residents to send postcards to legislators, as well as to e-mail
local legislators in support of the bill. They also intend to
mobilize residents to attend a public hearing on the bill, which
is scheduled for October 24 at the Statehouse.
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