MNA NewsScan, July 8, 2013: Hospital error rate “appalling;” Is 68 the new 65?

HEALTH CARE NEWS

How Consistent Hospital Error is Having a Deadly Effect on the Health Care System    ”Medical harm is probably one of the three leading causes of death in the U.S., but the government doesn’t adequately track it as it does deaths from automobiles, plane crashes, and cancer. It’s appalling,” he told the magazine.

The 9 Things You MUST Check Before Choosing a Hospital    7. Check the Nurse-to-Patient Ratio – Ideally, a nurse should have only four to six patients under his or her care at a time (and less if it’s critical or intensive care).

N.Y. Hospital Nearly Harvested Organs from Living Woman   Records the newspaper obtained under state freedom of information laws document a series of missteps, including doctors ignoring nurses’ observations that Burns was responding to stimuli and trying to breathe on her own. The surgery was called off when she opened her eyes in the operating room.

NOTES ON NURSING

U.K. Nurses To Be Asked to Work Until Age 68    More than 200,000 nurses are set to retire in the next few years but Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt hopes many will keep working.

LABOR UPDATES

The Roberts Court on Labor Rights.  Be Afraid.  Be Very Afraid  Carmon reports that while appeals court judges reverse employer wins at a rate of 9 percent, they reverse employee wins by a whopping 41 percent.

PSNA Call for Abstracts

The Pennsylvania State Nurses Association (PSNA) and the PSNA Environmental Health Committee have issued a Call for Abstracts for the 2013 Annual Fall Summit to be held October 18, 2013, at The Desmond Hotel & Conference Center, Malvern. Interested poster participants are encouraged to submit an abstract following the prescribed guidelines. No more than two (2) posters may be submitted by the same individual.

Embracing an ecocentric viewpoint has exhilarating potential for transforming nursing beyond its traditional boundaries. We live in a global culture united by economic interdependence, international air travel and worldwide communication networks. Contemporary environmental degradation and disasters have moved into the global arena. Realizing an ecocentric paradigm in nursing will encourage nurses to address worldwide environmental problems that affect the health of everything that exists. As a complement to this year’s theme, “Sustaining Healthy Future: Ecocentric Nursing in a Local and Global Environment,” PSNA is accepting poster abstract submissions utilizing research and evidence to support changes in the health care delivery system to our patients, including programs developed to promote sustainability and promote health in our local and global environments.

It is imperative to identify methods to sustain the world we live in and to identify methods that will promote healthy environments in our work and home environments that transcend traditional boundaries to explore new solutions for our environment. PSNA desires to recognize those who have contributed to quality patient care using best practice methods based on evidence-based practice and research that has led to effective care changes resulting in improved patient care and improved home and work environments in Pennsylvania and beyond. The poster abstract must describe work that has been completed or is near completion and processes that have been fully implemented with demonstration of their effects.

Click here to access submission criteria. Submission deadline is August 16, 2013.

Abstracts can be e-mailed to Patti Gates Smith at psmith@panurses.org. Abstracts are selected by members of the Cabinet on Nursing Practice and Professional Development. Notice of abstract review results will be mailed no later than September 9, 2013. For more information, contact PSNA Director of Professional Development, Patti Gates Smith, MSN, RNC-E, at 717-798-9975.

If big insurers drop out, who steps in?

Minnesota’s own UnitedHealth just made headlines by announcing that it is dropping out of the pool of private companies that would offer individual policies in California.  Aetna has also dropped out of the California market.  Source: http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-unitedhealth-insure-calif-20130702,0,4370321.story

It’s not a tragedy for Californians.  Both of those companies only had a combined 58,000 customers who can now seek new coverage in one of 13 Covered California providers.  What’s apparent, however, is that private companies are dropping out of even lucrative markets such as California where they can’t create policies that keep their costs down and rates up.  It’s the equivalent of taking their ball and going home, which in UnitedHealth’s case is employer-offered plans.

Another company isn’t going home, but they’re not playing either.  Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa and South Dakota has elected not to offer its policies on those respective states’ exchanges until the year 2015.  Analysts say the company is worried that the newly insured will be too sick (and therefore too expensive to cover).

The elderly, the self-employed, the-poor-but-not-too-poor, and those with pre-existing conditions may struggle to find insurance they can afford, especially in other states, but why?  The Affordable Care Act was designed to make healthcare coverage available to everyone. Because the Affordable Care Act sets standards that private insurance companies must meet: the coverage must provide value to the consumer; and it must be available to more people with more health issues.  All very noble ideals.

The true irony to these stories is that insurance companies lobbied hard to dictate the terms they had to play under nationwide.  ACA was nearly trampled to death by all the Gucci loafers from “K” street, and now, rather than play by those rules, however, UHC and Aetna decided to leave.

What will happen in states where there are fewer catch-alls, such as Wisconsin?  Look at another state with citizens with health concerns, Mississippi.  Thousands of residents in the Delta-36 of 82 counties-still have no provider that is willing to offer subsidized policies.  That’s more than 50,000 people who can’t find insurance even though they now qualify, according to Kaiser Health News.

Insurance companies are trying all kinds of tactics to keep the cost of healthcare down and profits up, including wellness programs, incentives to lower premiums, and brokering lower rates with hospitals, as Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota recently announced (and then delayed).  With hospital care being 31 percent of national healthcare costs, expect insurance companies to do more to contain what they pay hospitals.  It will be interesting to see if insurance companies push those hospitals to be more effective, to produce better patient outcomes, to reduce medical mistakes, and maybe even staff more nurses (which we know results in all of the above).

ACA continues to be like that big house we thought about and ultimately decided to buy.  We knew what we were getting from the outside, but there are some cracks we didn’t see on the inside.  In the end, we may be sorry we didn’t wait a little longer and buy that nice single-payer home we really wanted.

MNA NewsScan, July 3, 2013: Nurses, staffing, special skills combine to improve care for cancer patients

NOTES ON NURSING

More Cancer Specialist Nurses Improve Hospital Care   Patients of better staffed trusts were more likely to report that people treating and caring for them worked well together and they received enough emotional support during outpatient treatment.

HEALTH CARE NEWS

Obamacare Postpones Employer Mandate for a Year    Employers who don’t provide health insurance will be spared penalties of up to $3,000 per worker until 2015, a one-year delay of a major component of President Barack Obama’s health care reform law.

Kickstart Your Medical Bills   The Kennett family of Alexandria is one of thousands turning to the Internet to raise money for medical bills. The sites that host these campaigns operate much like online business fundraising sites such as Kickstarter.

American Way of Birth Is Costliest in the World   The couple had to approach the nine months that led to the birth of their daughter in May like an extended shopping trip though the American health care bazaar, sorting through an array of maternity services that most often have no clear price and — with no insurer to haggle on their behalf — trying to negotiate discounts from hospitals and doctors.

Why Our Health Care Lets Prices Run Wild   So why is our health care spending more than 17% of our gross domestic product, far more than any other country?

LABOR UPDATES

NLRB Uncertainty Benefits Big Corporate Donors   Republican senators who support a lawsuit that could shut down the National Labor Relations Board have received more than $6 million over the years from corporations that have already benefited from the lawsuit, according to a new analysis of campaign finance data.

Hyatt Workers Win Deal After Full-Court Press    Over the last three years, hotel workers employed nearly every tactic of a modern corporate campaign against Hyatt.

Rise of the Blue-Collar “Permatemp”   A recent ProPublica analysis found that at least 840,000 temp workers across the U.S. work blue-collar jobs earning them less than $25,000 a year. These aren’t day laborers, but regular employees of temp agencies working in the supply chains of some of America’s largest companies, such as Walmart and Nike.