Nurse Photo Contest – Calling all nurses!

Send us a photo for a chance to win $100! As many of you nurses already know, it is not easy to find accurate portrayals of nurses. As we explained the in our last photo contest: Real portrayals of the nursing profession are few and far between and instead of settling for buying fake-looking models posing in halloween nurse costumes for our stock photographs we at NursingJobs.us figured that we might as well try asking the many nurses who use our… Continue reading

Even a small unit can have a big effect

KinnicnursesMNA nurses had gone through three negotiation sessions with Grace, the latest owners of the Kinnic Nursing Home in River Falls, Wisconsin.  They last left the table with management trying to take away family leave language, leave of absence days,  to radically limit time for jury duty, and even reduce days off for the death of a child or spouse.

MNA nurses looked like they were headed toward mediation to get a new contract, but then they started showing that nurses were standing together.   Bobbi Spence, and Suzanne Kitzmann, LPNs and bargaining unit leaders, started handing out red wristbands to their fellow union members..  Even though the unit has only 14 nurses and are split over day/night shifts, nurses wore the wristbands all the time to make the spirit known.

“We had never done that before,” Bobbi said, “I don’t know what management thought but it was an eye opener for them.”

Nurses ended up negotiating an agreement that not only turned back all the takeback language but also more holidays off, more weekends off, and got more nurses eligible for holiday pay if they worked that day.

Nurses voted overwhelmingly to ratify the agreement.

 

Travel Nurse Rights

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Thumbs up for travel nurse rights!

Thumbs up for travel nurse rights!

At Travel Nursing Blogs, we love hearing from readers and travel nurses. We recently received an email from a travel nurse that dealt with travel nurse rights, according to both the American Nurses Association and to herself.

Travel nurse, Lacresha Hearn, RN, wrote:

“I have noticed a trend in the healthcare community as it relates to Travel Nurses. My feeling is that not only have the facilities forgotten, and the travel companies, but also we as Travel Nurses have forgotten that we have rights.”

Her concern is that the industry is not properly valuing all that travel nurses do for the healthcare field, and even that they may be considered “disposable” by some, rather than the high-value workforce they are.

Lacresha wanted to send out a big reminder to all the “Travel Jewels” out there, that they have important rights, and she invokes the ANA’s Bill of Rights:

  1. Nurses have the right to practice in a manner that fulfills their obligations to society and to those who receive nursing care.
  2. Nurses have the right to practice in environments that allow them to act in accordance with professional standards and legally authorized scopes of practice.
  3. Nurses have the right to a work environment that supports and facilitates ethical practice, in accordance with the Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements.
  4. Nurses have the right to freely and openly advocate for themselves and their patients, without fear of retribution.
  5. Nurses have the right to fair compensation for their work, consistent with their knowledge, experience and professional responsibilities.
  6. Nurses have the right to a work environment that is safe for themselves and for their patients.
  7. Nurses have the right to negotiate the conditions of their employment, either as individuals or collectively, in all practice settings.

Lacresha wrote that “we as nurses should carry [these rights] close to our hearts.” She adds that having the right to “freely and openly advocate for ourselves” is a right that she wants all travel nurses to always remember.

She closed her letter with a bit of gratitude for her fellow travel nurses, writing, “Lastly, thank you for all you do and all of the sacrifices you make for this honorable profession. Your Fellow Travel Nurse, Lacresha Hearn, RN”

What’s your take on travel nurse rights? Would you add any special travel nurse rights to the ANA’s list?

 

110-Year Celebration

This is a night to celebrate! We’ve saved your seat at our 110-Year Anniversary Celebration. For over a century, nurses have built an unblemished reputation that’s earned us the trust of the colleagues we serve alongside. We are the mortar that holds together a standard of care that’s second to none. In these 110 years, we’ve won and maintained the confidence of the people we serve. The evening will begin with a cocktail reception followed by our guest speaker, Gloria Donnelly, PhD, RN, FAAN, Dean and Professor of Drexel University’s College of Nursing and Health Professions. After a seated dinner, we will honor our 2013 award recipients and the Nursing Foundation of Pennsylvania’s 2013 scholarship recipients.
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Haiti Update: RNRN supported volunteer work by local Habitat for Humanity volunteers

HAITI UPDATE: In our continued commitment to the people of Haiti, RNRN supported volunteer work by local Habitat for Humanity volunteers, and also donated supplies to support the work of Hope House Haiti with children and families decimated by the 2010 earthquake and ongoing economic challenges. Thanks to the generous support of our RNRN and NNU members, a shipment including food, tents and other necessities was sent and gratefully received by the Hope House community.

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RN’s Make a Powerful Showing at Cal/OSHA Hearing

“When I came down the hallway today and I heard the roar from the room I thought I was in the wrong place. As a labor representative one of the problems we frequently find in our membership is complacency and to see the room filled today with organized labor and everyone coming out on the issue reinforces my belief in organized labor and makes me proud to be up here as a labor representative for you today, so thank you.” 
Dave Harrison, Labor Representative CAL/OSHA
  

More than 80 CNA members from across California attended a Cal/OSHA hearing yesterday on Safe Patient Handling. Registered Nurses (RN) from every major hospital chain and every region of the state gave compelling testimony in support of strong, concise regulatory language to protect patients and staff from injuries caused by lifting and moving patients. The hearing marked the next step towards adoption of fully-developed regulations Cal/OSHA will then use to enforce Assembly Bill 1136, the Hospital Patient and Health Care Worker Injury Protection Act, a bill designed to protect RNs and other health care workers from patient handling injuries and to provide patients with safe and appropriate care.

Each year, thousands of RNs suffer back and musculoskeletal injuries while providing care in California hospitals. Many RNs are forced out of their occupation due to the severity of their injuries. The passage of AB 1136 was a significant victory for CNA. Similar legislation was vetoed five times by former Gov. Schwarzenegger. The bill was finally signed in to law by Gov. Brown in October 2011.

During the public hearing, CNA members’ testimony made it clear that despite enactment of AB 1136, RNs continue to struggle with inadequate safe patient handling policies. “We do not have any nurses aides, nor do we have a lift team, so it’s just us to lift the patients,” testified Debra Amour, an RN in the ICU at Seton Medical Center in Daly City. “When you have a 400 pound patient who has a leg wound for example, it can take the entire staff to hold the leg while the dressing is changed, which can easily take twenty minutes. During that time, there is no one in the unit watching the other patients,” said Amour.  “We were trained years ago on the Hoyer lift, but the first time we used it, it almost fell over with a patient in it, and now it’s gone. We haven’t seen it since,” said Amour. Other nurses echoed Amour’s testimony, stating that there was little to no training or equipment at their facilities.

“Since the law was passed, CAL/OSHA has already cited some hospitals for patient handling violations,” testified CNA Board Member, Margie Keenan, a RN at Long Beach Memorial. Keenan urged the Cal/OSHA Board to adopt stronger language to protect direct care assignments. “RNs perpetually grapple with razor thin staffing margins, and it’s our position that the clear language in AB1136 protecting direct care patient assignments must be added to these regulations in order to ensure enforcement and to provide a safe environment for workers and patients.”  Keenan expressed concern that language in the current draft could be used “to undermine the position and authority of the RN as the primary coordinator of care,” and urged the board to amend the language to clarify and preserve the central role of the RN. 

Following the public testimony, several Cal/OSHA Board members commended the nurses for their testimony and noted the need for additional training, equipment, and staffing. The hospital association, whose representative made a very mild mannered statement during the public hearing, submitted written formal comments intended to weaken the proposed language, including recommendations to weaken training and recordkeeping requirements and the role of the RN. The stakes are high for both industry and workers. The California law is currently one of the best in the country. Strong regulatory language will set a ground-breaking precedent for legislation in other states and on the Federal level.

Over the next few weeks, Cal/OSHA will review the nurses’ testimony – and any other submitted statements.  Based on those comments, Cal/OSHA may revise the proposed regulations. A fifteen day public comment period will follow upon release of the revised regulations. We have to be vigilant to prevent industry from weakening the law in this regulatory phase. Stay tuned!