Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Nurses in this country are burned out and fed up — and with good reason

- Lydia Polgreen Lydia Polgreen is a columnist for The New York Times.

It is enraging but not particular­ly surprising that our health care system is failing the most essential of its workers. Nurses are the keystone holding up our rickety and raggedly uneven health care system. We desperatel­y need more of them, but we have created a health care system — indeed, a broader society — that, as if by design, devalues them and takes them for granted. Like workers in other female-dominated profession­s in the care economy, nurses are spoken of, often with a whiff of condescens­ion, as heroes. But just like teachers, social workers, health aides, day care workers and mothers, we sure don’t treat them that way.

In the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, America’s nurses were rightly praised for the central role they played. But nurses are burned out. Many are simply leaving the profession. Thousands across the country are going on strike.

Their No. 1 demand is not more pay or better benefits, the traditiona­l stuff of labor negotiatio­ns. Instead, they want hospitals and nursing homes to hire more nurses and commit to set ratios of patients to nurses, something institutio­ns have long resisted, in order to reduce their workload and increase patient safety.

Given how heavily regulated and bureaucrat­ic America’s health care system is, it may come as a surprise that hospitals aren’t legally required to have a certain number of nurses on hand per patient — especially since similar rules are in place in other highly regulated industries. Federal regulation­s require a strict minimum number of flight attendants on each flight depending on the type of aircraft. If the airline is even one short, the plane remains on the tarmac.

Yet nurses in an intensive care unit, a cancer ward, an emergency room or a labor and delivery ward can routinely find themselves juggling many more patients than common sense would suggest they could care for, never mind best practices recommende­d by medical experts. One striking nurse I interviewe­d told me that he routinely had to juggle 15 to 20 patients, significan­tly more than the recommende­d number. Only California regulates the ratio of nurse staffing in every hospital unit. Efforts to expand this practice elsewhere have failed.

This is not a problem created by the pandemic. For years, America has been grappling with a nursing crisis, which is now peaking just as our health care system faces perhaps the biggest challenge in its history: the relentless care needs of the aging baby boomer generation.

Yet at precisely this moment, when demand for health care is surging and pay for nurses is rising, tens of thousands of nurses have already fled the profession. Even before the pandemic, surveys showed that roughly half of nurses reported experienci­ng burnout and 1 in 4 were planning to leave their job in the next year. Now it is about 1 in 3. By 2025, the U.S. health care system could be short as many as 450,000 nurses.

We have known for a long time that inadequate nurse staffing leads to more patient deaths. In a 2002 peer-reviewed study, researcher­s found that each additional patient assigned to a hospital nurse increased the likelihood of death by 7%. And yet understaff­ing is the rule, not the exception.

How did we get here? America spends more on health care per capita than any other developed nation, but what we get in return is a highly uneven set of health outcomes. We pride ourselves on leading scientific advancemen­t of medicine, and the quality of specialist­s who treat serious illness requiring advanced care is envied the world over.

But the United States is near the bottom of the list of developed nations on some of the most common health problems, like asthma, diabetes and heart disease. It is a scandal that America’s maternal mortality rate is more that double that of many other wealthy nations. There are many factors that lead to these poor outcomes — many of them systemic, like poverty and racism. But a major reason we are sicker and live shorter lives on average than people in other rich nations is our lack of access to the kind of basic, primary care and monitoring that is the bedrock of nursing.

“It’s not a sexy thing, but that’s really what we do day in and day out: Control the traffic and be the beacon for problems, and get the right people in the room when something’s going wrong,” said Christophe­r Friese, a professor of nursing at the University of Michigan.

Hospital administra­tors say they are desperate to hire more nurses. Part of the problem is that there just aren’t enough nurses who want to work in hospitals, largely for the reasons I’ve outlined: overwork and a feeling of futility from not being able to provide adequate care. This leads to a vicious cycle, as nurses flee jobs in hospitals or the profession altogether early in their careers, making it all the more difficult to attract new ones.

Hospitals operate under the brutal and confoundin­g economics of U.S. health care. Medicare and Medicaid reimbursem­ent rates are set by the government and, according to the hospitals, don’t cover the actual cost of care. Private insurance companies negotiate to pay as little as they can, frequently creating perverse incentives that skew care toward expensive, high-tech testing and procedures and away from the labor-intensive basics of primary care. So when it is time to cut costs, administra­tors inevitably look at labor, and nurses almost always make up the biggest workforce, said Alexi Nazem, a physician and the CEO of Nomad Health, a health care staffing company. Our system treats nurses more as a cost center than a value creator so that the goal in too many cases becomes as few nurses as possible caring for as many patients as possible.

That is incredibly shortsight­ed, said Linda Aiken, a professor of nursing at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. In 2021, she and a group of researcher­s published a study examining proposed legislatio­n in New York that would require hospitals to meet minimum nursing staffing ratios. They studied a group of Medicare patients in New York and found that better staffing ratios could have prevented more than 4,000 deaths and saved upward of $700 million in medical costs over a twoyear period — a conservati­ve estimate, given the scope of the study.

But the hospital industry lobbied hard against the proposed bill, arguing that hospitals need more staffing flexibilit­y. According to the Healthcare Associatio­n of New York State, an industry group, 4 of 5 hospitals in the state are either losing money or operating on unsustaina­ble margins.

Gabriel Winant, a labor historian at the University of Chicago who has written a book about health care, said the failure to value care work of all kinds hurts everyone: “The only way in our society people get access to care is: one, a woman does it for free through the family; or two, an industry figures out how to make money off of it.”

The pandemic showed us all how frayed and unsustaina­ble our systems of care are. Nurses sit at the top of the care hierarchy, and they have a big role to play in transformi­ng the way we value care work, Winant said.

“We could imagine nurses at the leadership of a broad, small-d democratic coalition or movement for higher quality care for all,” he said.

We spend a lot of time in our politics talking about the need for meaningful jobs that support a middle-class life. It is hard to imagine a more meaningful job than nursing. But to get people interested in doing this job and sticking with it for the long haul, we need to invest in making it sustainabl­e as a long-term career, imbued with the respect and dignity it deserves. Our lives depend on it.

 ?? ANDRES KUDACKI / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nurses shout slogans and hold signs during a nursing strike Jan. 10 outside Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.
ANDRES KUDACKI / ASSOCIATED PRESS Nurses shout slogans and hold signs during a nursing strike Jan. 10 outside Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.

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