The Day

Nurses on N.Y.’s front lines call for minimum staffing standards

- By MAriNA ViLLENEUVE

Albany, N.Y. — Nurses on the front lines of New York’s COVID-19 pandemic are calling for the state to enact minimum staffing standards ahead of another wave of infections.

Health care industry leaders, though, warn that passing such a law would saddle facilities with billions of dollars in extra costs they can’t afford.

Under legislatio­n now before a legislativ­e committee, the state would for the first time set minimum nurseto-patient ratios, including a standard of one nurse for every two patients in intensive care units.

California now has such a law. Other states don’t. Supporters say the legislatio­n would boost the quality of care, reduce staff burnout and let the state hold health care facilities accountabl­e for inadequate staffing.

Minimum staffing ratios also might have helped last spring, they say, when hospitals and nursing homes in the New York City metropolit­an area were overwhelme­d with a flood of COVID-19 patients.

“If we had better staffing in place before COVID-19, if we weren’t stretched so thin, we would have been able to handle the flex and surge that was required,” said Pat Kane, who leads a union representi­ng nurses statewide.

Health industry groups have long called minimum staffing levels too costly and unnecessar­y. They say implementi­ng staffing mandates now would be especially damaging, as hospitals face sharp revenue losses.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo promised in 2018 to set safe staffing levels, which he said was “linked to quality care,” but this month his health department released a report estimating the proposed staffing rules would force nursing homes and hospitals to hire a combined 35,000 nurses, at a cost of around $4 billion.

“During the crisis, the increased costs would have been unbearable, coming on top of the extremely expensive surge costs frontline hospitals incurred,” Greater New York Hospital Associatio­n President Kenneth Raske told hospital leaders this month.

“Now, in the COVID-19 transition era, when hospitals are fighting for their very survival due to a severe loss of revenue, such a mandate is unthinkabl­e.”

It also is not clear whether staffing mandates would have made any difference in an extraordin­ary crisis like the one that enveloped the health care system last spring, when hospitals were seeing so many dying patients that they had to bring in refrigerat­or trucks to handle the bodies.

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