WE CAN STOP THE CLIMATE CHAOS

Join nurses, community members, and other union members in one of the largest climate justice events in recent history on Saturday, August 3 where thousands of people will come together in a momentous West Coast mass action — We Can Stop Climate Chaos — to stand with the people of Richmond who are on the frontlines of our common fight for the health  and safety of our communities, workplaces, and to declare our collective demand for a healthy energy policy.

On this year anniversary of Richmond’s Chevron Refinery explosion where nurses were on the front line treating 15,000 community members harmed by the effect — we will stand in solidarity to fight for community health, clean energy jobs, an end to Chevron pollution, and NO Keystone XL pipeline to further put our communities health at risk.

When: Saturday, August 3, 2013 at 10:00 am

Where: Richmond BART — follow signs to the Union Contingent.

Wear red and join CNA and fellow union members

RSVP to your Labor Representative

For more info about the action visit: www.JoinSummerHeat.org/bay #SummerHeat

 

Healthcare workers continue to rank high on injured-on-the-job study

dangerousoccupations4Nurses won’t be surprised to hear another study that finds health care workers suffer more injuries than in any other sector in the United States.  Nurses know friends and colleagues who have lost work days and income to injuries, some who even had to give up their career of bedside nursing.  The corporate focus on the bottom-line puts more weight on our shoulders, literally, as we are told to “make do” without enough hands or resources to move a patient or perform a procedure.

The proof is in the numbers.  In 2011, injuries to healthcare workers went up 6 percent while construction and agriculture-related injuries actually went down.  Work-related injuries for these workers is nearly 8 times greater than for other workers.  Injuries related to workplace violence is 7 times higher than for other types of workers.

What’s even more surprising is the extent of the problem and the lack of government regulation of health care worksites.  If you ask the general public which occupation has the most workplace injuries, most would guess construction trades, and that seems to be the assumption OSHA (Occupational Health and Safety Administration) works under as well.  A new report by Public Citizen finds that while health care workers greatly outnumber construction workers (and we suffer more than double the number of injuries annually), OSHA conducts nearly twenty times as many inspections of construction sites as they do of health care facilities.

OSHA does have a good track record of success in enforcing existing standards for health care facilities (the Bloodborne Pathogens standard, for example, has dramatically decreased the rates of Hepatitis B and HIV/AIDS infections among health care workers).  However (and it’s a big however), there are no OSHA standards for two of the worst safety hazards in health care today:  unsafe ergonomic conditions and workplace violence. Without specific standards to address these common hazards, OSHA is extremely limited in their ability to protect health care workers.

Does your workplace have strategies to protect you from ergonomic hazards or workplace violence? Are nurses involved in planning and implementing these programs? Would you like to work on these issues from a statewide perspective? The MNA Health and Safety Committee is seeking new members to educate nurses about these issues and many more in our workplaces. Please contact Geri Katz at 651-414-2855 or geri.katz@mnnurses.org if you are interested in learning more about joining the committee.

Learn more:

Read the report:

http://www.citizen.org/documents/health-care-workers-unprotected-2013-report.pdf

NNU Co-President Karen Higgins interview: http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=10452

Huffington Post: The Hidden Health Care Problem

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/taylor-lincoln/the-hidden-health-care-pr_b_3611970.html

Letter to Australia’s nurses

Dear Brett and Judith,
The 20,000 nurses across the state of Minnesota in the United States proudly hail our courageous sisters and brothers of the NSW Nurses and Midwives Association.  You are boldly calling for a solution to the unnecessary risk to patients you witness every day in the 160 hospitals throughout NSW.

We are with you in your strike; we are with you at the table; we are with you in the halls of your government as you demand the ratios the vulnerable patients of Australia deserve.

Carry on, knowing you have the support of colleagues around the world.

WaltandLinda

MNA President Linda Hamilton and
Executive Director Walt Frederickson

Linda Hamilton, RN, BSN
President, Minnesota Nurses Association

Walter Frederickson, RN
Executive Director, Minnesota Nurses Association

 

More here:

http://www.southcoastregister.com.au/story/1657305/nurses-strike-over-ratios/?cs=202

http://au.news.yahoo.com/latest/a/-/latest/18121519/nurses-strike-in-nsw-over-safety-concerns/

http://au.news.yahoo.com/video/national/watch/18134116/nsw-nurses-strike/

Superheroes visit Texas Children’s Hospital

A group of superheroes, disguised as window washers, visited Texas Children’s Hospital on Friday.  Houston Chronicle photographer Maya Beltran was on hand to capture the surprise and delight of the hospital’s patients.   The surprise visit was part of a growing trend of window washers donning superhero costumes at hospitals across the nation.