Los Angeles Times

Kaiser workers go on strike

Mental health staffers rally for better patient loads, fewer referrals in weeklong walkout.

- By Samantha Masunaga samantha.masunaga @latimes.com Twitter: @smasunaga

About 1,500 Kaiser Permanente mental health workers are expected to take part in a weeklong strike that began Monday at facilities throughout California as their union negotiates for a new contract.

The workers on strike include licensed clinical social workers, marriage and family therapists, psychologi­sts, medical social workers and psychiatri­c nurses who are part of the National Union of Healthcare Workers. The union has called for smaller patient-to-therapist ratios, fewer patient referrals to therapists outside the Kaiser network and, in some cases, increased staffing. Its latest contract with Kaiser expired in September.

Kaiser said all of its hospitals and medical facilities will be open during the strike, though some non-urgent services are being reschedule­d.

The Oakland health maintenanc­e organizati­on, which reported net income of $3.8 billion last year, provides health insurance coverage to 11.8 million people.

Elizabeth White, a licensed clinical social worker in the psychiatry department at a Kaiser clinic in Los Angeles’ Baldwin Hills/Crenshaw neighborho­od, said her patients sometimes have to wait four weeks between appointmen­ts. Wait times at some Kaiser medical offices have improved over the years, but patients need more frequent appointmen­ts, she said.

“Without that type of interventi­on, people drop out,” said White, a 20-year Kaiser veteran.

In 2014, Kaiser paid a $4million fine to settle allegation­s by the California Department of Managed Health Care that the HMO inadequate­ly treated mental health patients. Among the state’s allegation­s was that patients sometimes had to wait more than two to three weeks to see therapists for initial and follow-up appointmen­ts.

Since then, Kaiser said it has invested $93 million to refurbish existing mental health facilities and spent $175 million to build 13 new ones. The HMO said it has also increased mental health staffing by 30% since 2015 and that wait times have shrunk to about two weeks.

Although wait times can occasional­ly be longer, Kaiser is “pretty consistent­ly meeting those standards” of two weeks, said Annie Russell, chief operating officer for Kaiser’s Southern California region.

She said the HMO also can do preliminar­y phone screenings to identify patients who need immediate interventi­on.

“The demand for mental health services has exploded, and keeping up with that demand is our highest priority,” she said.

To that end, Kaiser has referred patients to outside therapists. Russell said all those therapists are licensed by the state and qualified to provide care.

“Of course our interest is always to keep the work inside when possible,” she said. “But in cases where we have high demand, we absolutely will ensure Kaiser Permanente members get access to care.”

The California Nurses Assn. and the Stationary Engineers Local 39, which represents hospital power plant workers, have given their members strike sanction, which allows them to decide on an individual basis whether to join the picket lines.

 ?? Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? LICENSED MARRIAGE and family therapists Leslie Fuentes-Nguyen, left, and Monica Garcia gather at the Kaiser Permanente facility on Sunset Boulevard for a strike by the National Union of Healthcare Workers.
Christina House Los Angeles Times LICENSED MARRIAGE and family therapists Leslie Fuentes-Nguyen, left, and Monica Garcia gather at the Kaiser Permanente facility on Sunset Boulevard for a strike by the National Union of Healthcare Workers.

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