The Guardian (USA)

US nurses at for-profit hospital chain to strike over cuts and PPE shortages

- Michael Sainato

Nurses and support staff at HCA Healthcare, the largest for-profit hospital chain in the US, are planning to strike this Friday in protest over cuts and concession­s the corporatio­n is pushing on frontline healthcare workers as coronaviru­s continues to spread.

The Guardian and Kaiser Health News have so far identified reports of 679 frontlineh­ealthcare workers who have died of Covid-19 in the US, amid continuing reports of long hours and shortages of personal protective equipment (PPE).

Erin McIntosh, a nurse in the code blue/rapid response department at the HCA-owned Riverside Community Hospital in Riverside, California, for six years, is one of around 1,000 nurses represente­d by SEIU Local 121RN who are going on strike starting 26 June in protest of hospital understaff­ing during the pandemic, which they say violates California’s nurse-to-patient ratio laws.

“HCA has continuous­ly not upheld their end of the mediation agreement of our nurses staying in ratio,” said McIntosh. The agreement was made in March 2019. “We’re striking June 26 through July 6 because they didn’t want to uphold our mediation agreement.”

Hospital staff reusing masks and gowns has been common throughout the pandemic, McIntosh, explained, creating another layer of stress for healthcare workers.

“When the pandemic hit, I thought HCA, our hospital, would be revving up the resources, that we would have more resources, more staff, but unfortunat­ely it was the opposite. They started making cuts, and we’re working with skeleton crews,” McIntosh added.

“We’re being cut to the bare minimum.”

Job listings for nurses at HCA owned hospitals in the Los Angeles area were posted in anticipati­on of the strike actions. HCA reportedly created a unit focused on strike-related labor shortages, offering nurses who appear for shifts during strikes higher pay than they currently receive and a free conti

nental breakfast. The company is also seeking to hire labor relations directors in Nashville, Denver, Dallas and Kansas City, and has continued retaining union avoidance consultant­s in Asheville, North Carolina, amid a union organizing drive at Mission Hospital.

“After thoughtful considerat­ion; the hospital and 121RN failed to come to an agreement and we declined to extend the current agreement,” a spokespers­on for HCA told the Guardian in an email. “At this time we believe we are independen­tly making significan­t progress around the topic of staffing at Riverside Community Hospital and believe that we can support our employees on our own without the influence of an outdated agreement.”

Around the US, nurses and hospital workers at HCA have reported understaff­ing and a lack of resources through the coronaviru­s pandemic. HCA is currently pushing employees to accept several concession­s to pay and benefits, including wage freezes, eliminatio­n of 401k retirement contributi­ons, and signaling the possibilit­y of layoffs, with non-union employees already forced to accept freezes to annual wage and salary raises.

HCA received about $1bn in federal coronaviru­s relief that does not have to be repaid, and over $4bn in accelerate­d medicare payments. The corporatio­n made over $7bn in profits over the past two years, and HCA CEO Sam Hazen received $27m in total compensati­on in 2019, his first year in the position. Hazen and other executives reportedly took pay cuts in 2020, citing the pandemic, but based on his 2019 salary the cut equates to less than 1% of his total compensati­on.

“Patient safety is not there due to the lack of staffing,” said Xochitl Gonzalez, a certified nursing assistant (CNA) at Los Robles Medical Center in Thousand Oaks, California. CNA’s don’t have mandated staffing ratios, and Gonzalez noted she is currently expected to cover up to 30 patients throughout the day. “They’ve received billions of dollars in federal stimulus relief and they’re still cutting staffing. Managers are doing our work and they’re sending people home, cutting our hours.”

At HCA owned University Hospital Medical Center in Oakland Park, Florida, nurses with SEIUHealth­care are currently bargaining for a new union contract set to expire at the end of July 2020.

Nurses at 19 HCA-owned hospitals around the US are represente­d by National Nurses United, who are also facing pressure from HCA to make concession­s to current union contracts and have held protests during the pandemic over the lack of hospital preparatio­n and resources to handle coronaviru­s cases, and the threat of layoffs.

“The federal relief funding should not be a bargaining chip for management,” said Kimberly Smith, a registered nurse at Corpus Christi Medical Center in Texas. “We’re not in negotiatio­ns, we have a set contract. For me, it’s set in disbelief and distrust in HCA for trying to change something they already agreed to.”

In Florida, Barbara Murray, a registered nurse at St Petersburg General Hospital recently protested outside of her hospital over the threats of possible layoffs and compensati­on cuts, even as their current union contract runs until May 2021.

“It’s very frustratin­g. A lot of days we don’t have enough staff, enough techs,” said Murray. “I’ve been a nurse for 40 years and I’ve seen a lot of changes over time, but the changes aren’t in nurses, we just want our patients to be safe, get well, and go home, and we expect our hospital to provide us with what we need to take care of them to get and get them home safely to their families.”

A spokespers­on for HCA told the Guardian there have not been any furloughs or layoffs directly related to the pandemic yet. “We asked our unions to forgo their raises, as well, to maintain continuati­on pay for their members, and they refused. As a result, while the pay continuati­on program will continue for most of our colleagues, it will end June 6 for most colleagues represente­d by a union. While we hope to continue to avoid layoffs, the unions’ decisions have made that more difficult for our facilities that are unionized,” said the spokespers­on.

They cited $138m spent so far on pay continuati­on programs during the coronaviru­s pandemic for 120,000 employees, said corporate executive leadership have taken pay cuts between 10-30% and claimed, despite PPE shortages across the US, HCA Healthcare has provided all hospitals with adequate PPE.

 ?? Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images ?? Nurses stage a protest with support from the registered nurses union, SEIU Local 121RN, outside the West Hills Hospital on 18 June in West Hills, California.
Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images Nurses stage a protest with support from the registered nurses union, SEIU Local 121RN, outside the West Hills Hospital on 18 June in West Hills, California.
 ?? Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images ?? The nurses are demanding that the Hospital Corporatio­n of America bring an end to low staffing, insufficie­nt personal protective equipment amid the pandemic.
Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images The nurses are demanding that the Hospital Corporatio­n of America bring an end to low staffing, insufficie­nt personal protective equipment amid the pandemic.

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