SeaCat
Hey, my Halo is smoking
- Joined
- Sep 23, 2003
- Posts
- 15,378
There is a major crisis brewing in health care that is not talked about. This is the staffing levels at the hospitals.
Most hospitals in the United States are For Profit Hospitals. They are a business there to make money.
Where they get the money os from the Insurance Companies. (This does include Medicare and Medicade.) The Insurance Companies set the amount they will pay to the hospital based on the type of care required by the patient. This is all pretty basic.
The Insurance Companies in their drive for profits are constantly adjusting the amounts they pay. Rarely does this amount go up.
The Hospitals constantly review their costs. How the Insurance payouts are going down while the hospitals own insurance payments are going up. (Among other expenses.) The hospitals too have to make a profit so they are constantly looking for ways in which to cut costs. Again this is pretty basic.
Now the easiest place and way to trim costs is in the staffing. Nothing new there.
Now here is the problem, and I'll use my experiences in my hospital as an example.
Ten years ago Lisa, an R.N., had an average patient load of four patients. At the same time Aide Missy had a patient load of between eight to ten patients. Lisa and Missy were easily able to care for their patients. If a patient went bad they could deal with that without endangering the safety or decreasing the care of their other patients.
The hospital changed to a for profit hospital. Cost cutting began. Lisa found herself taking care of five patients while Missy found herself taking care of ten or eleven patients. Now because of advances in treatment as well as government oversight they both had a slight increase in paperwork. They could deal with this even though it made more work for them.
The hospital admin. pointed to the fact that Lisa and Missy were able to care for the patients with this slight increase and said that all was good. They needed more profits so they again added to the workload.
Every time they added to the work load they pointed at Lisa and Missy and said they were taking care of the patients. They didn't see how the time they had to care for their patients was going down. They didn't see how when an emergency came up there was a scramble to take care of the emergency as well as the other patients.
Now ten years later Lisa is working on a daily basis with eight plus patients and Missy is working with between fifteen and twenty patients. They have more paperwork and they have increased duties as well. Many of the patients they deal with on a daily basis on the floor would have been in the I.C.U. ten years ago. They can deal with this but just barely. If a patient goes bad on them their other patients have to wait until the problem is taken care of.
While this has been happening the pay for the Nursing Staff hs pretty much stagnated. IN the past ten years the pay raises for both Lisa and Missy has gone up a total of two dollars an hour.
Student Nurses see this and decide to work in other places like Doctors Offices or in Staffing Companies.
Soon there will be problems. There will be accidents, people will be injured and/or die. Lawsuits will ensue.
Now the worst part of this will be who is blamed. It won't be the hospitals or their owners. It will be The R.N.'s and Aides. It will be the people who are there to help other people. It will be the people who put themselves through hell on a daily basis with the sole aim of helping others. They will lose their jobs, they will lose their licenses and in some cases they will be fined or even incarcerated.
So how do we fix this?
In my mind there are a couple of ways to stop this from happening or getting worse.
1) Institute mandatory minimum staffing levels.
2) Reign in the Insurance Companies.
3) Reign in the hospitals. Make them non profit once again.
No one is going to like any of these cures. They go against the Free Market Ideal.
Cat
Most hospitals in the United States are For Profit Hospitals. They are a business there to make money.
Where they get the money os from the Insurance Companies. (This does include Medicare and Medicade.) The Insurance Companies set the amount they will pay to the hospital based on the type of care required by the patient. This is all pretty basic.
The Insurance Companies in their drive for profits are constantly adjusting the amounts they pay. Rarely does this amount go up.
The Hospitals constantly review their costs. How the Insurance payouts are going down while the hospitals own insurance payments are going up. (Among other expenses.) The hospitals too have to make a profit so they are constantly looking for ways in which to cut costs. Again this is pretty basic.
Now the easiest place and way to trim costs is in the staffing. Nothing new there.
Now here is the problem, and I'll use my experiences in my hospital as an example.
Ten years ago Lisa, an R.N., had an average patient load of four patients. At the same time Aide Missy had a patient load of between eight to ten patients. Lisa and Missy were easily able to care for their patients. If a patient went bad they could deal with that without endangering the safety or decreasing the care of their other patients.
The hospital changed to a for profit hospital. Cost cutting began. Lisa found herself taking care of five patients while Missy found herself taking care of ten or eleven patients. Now because of advances in treatment as well as government oversight they both had a slight increase in paperwork. They could deal with this even though it made more work for them.
The hospital admin. pointed to the fact that Lisa and Missy were able to care for the patients with this slight increase and said that all was good. They needed more profits so they again added to the workload.
Every time they added to the work load they pointed at Lisa and Missy and said they were taking care of the patients. They didn't see how the time they had to care for their patients was going down. They didn't see how when an emergency came up there was a scramble to take care of the emergency as well as the other patients.
Now ten years later Lisa is working on a daily basis with eight plus patients and Missy is working with between fifteen and twenty patients. They have more paperwork and they have increased duties as well. Many of the patients they deal with on a daily basis on the floor would have been in the I.C.U. ten years ago. They can deal with this but just barely. If a patient goes bad on them their other patients have to wait until the problem is taken care of.
While this has been happening the pay for the Nursing Staff hs pretty much stagnated. IN the past ten years the pay raises for both Lisa and Missy has gone up a total of two dollars an hour.
Student Nurses see this and decide to work in other places like Doctors Offices or in Staffing Companies.
Soon there will be problems. There will be accidents, people will be injured and/or die. Lawsuits will ensue.
Now the worst part of this will be who is blamed. It won't be the hospitals or their owners. It will be The R.N.'s and Aides. It will be the people who are there to help other people. It will be the people who put themselves through hell on a daily basis with the sole aim of helping others. They will lose their jobs, they will lose their licenses and in some cases they will be fined or even incarcerated.
So how do we fix this?
In my mind there are a couple of ways to stop this from happening or getting worse.
1) Institute mandatory minimum staffing levels.
2) Reign in the Insurance Companies.
3) Reign in the hospitals. Make them non profit once again.
No one is going to like any of these cures. They go against the Free Market Ideal.
Cat