Happy Nurses Week 2015!

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Happy Nurses Week 2015!

Happy Nurses Week 2015! Click here to join in the fun at WeLoveOurNurses.com and read on for more Nurses Week fun and freebies.

Nurses don’t always get the appreciation they deserve, and that’s why Nurses Week, celebrated each year from May 6-12, is such a wonderful holiday.

It’s a great chance for all of us to say “Thank You” to the nurses in our lives for their amazing abilities and unflagging commitment to their patients.

So, Happy Nurses Week 2015 to you! And most importantly, THANK YOU. We gave a little Nurses Week 2015 preview a few week ago, but here’s a collection of more fun and freebies to help you celebrate this week in style:

  • Medical Solutions is celebrating “Your Nurses Week” with activities based upon Travel Nurse feedback. Visit WeLoveOurNurses.com to view and submit to The Real Nurses of Nurses Week photo gallery for the chance to win Amazon and Tafford Uniforms gift cards ranging from $25-$100. You can also download and share Nurses Week eCards, enter the Fourth Annual Nurses of Tomorrow Scholarship Contest (which awards three $2000 scholarships), and learn about and support Nurses House, a national fund for nurses in need.
  • Cinnabon is once again offering nurses who show their healthcare ID badge a free Cinnabon Classic Roll or MiniBon® roll May 6-12.
  • Amazon.com is offering free eBook downloads of The White Linen Nurse.
  • NurseEyeRoll.com is doing some fun giveaways for Nabee socks, Nurse Watches, and signed copies of The Nurses: A Year of Secrets, Drama, and Miracles with the Heroes of the Hospital by Alexandra Robbins — which I wrote about recently here — as well as Becoming Nursey.
  • Johnson & Jonson’s Campaign for Nursing Future is celebrating with a special issue of its Nursing Notes as well as some free pins, magnets, and activity books you can find here.
  • Fazoli’s will surprise more than 1,000 nurses at select children’s hospitals with meals and will also offer an in-store deal. At participating locations, from May 6-12, nurses wearing scrubs can show their healthcare ID badge for a free Twisted Trio entrée with the purchase of a drink.
  • Lippincott Nursing Center will offer a variety of daily deals, giveaways, and discounts.

We hope you have a very happy Nurses Week 2015!

If you know of more Nurses Week events and freebies this year, please feel free to share them in the comments!

Minnesota nurses oppose MNCare repeal

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By Mathew Keller, RN JD, MNA Nurse Policy Specialist

When cuts are made to public insurance programs, we all end up paying more.  Just the other day I heard the story of Mary*, a young woman who found some unusual lumps in her breast.  Having already had her preventive care exam for the year, she could not afford the high cost of following up with her physician.  When she was finally able to get her next annual exam, Mary got the heartwrenching news that she had Stage 4 breast cancer.

MinnesotaCare, a public health insurance program for the working poor, is under threat from state legislators in the House of Representatives. In the long run, gutting MinnesotaCare is a losing proposition for our patients, our hospitals, and our state.

MinnesotaCare is a program for those who earn between 133 percent and 200 percent of the Federal Poverty Line (FPL), which is $11,770 for an individual and $24,250 for a family of four this year. MinnesotaCare currently serves 105,000 individuals and families who work hard and yet don’t have employer-provided insurance and can’t afford coverage on the open market.  The program requires enrollees to pay premiums of $15-$50, depending upon income, and to share in some of the costs of coverage.

If MinnesotaCare is repealed, its current enrollees will be forced to enroll in a private insurance plan, which will cost more and deliver less. For example, a 2015 silver plan would cost an individual earning $16,243 annually a $46 monthly premium, while only covering 70 percent of medical costs. That same individual would pay a monthly premium of $15 while receiving 98 percent coverage under MinnesotaCare. For the working poor, this is a huge difference.

As nurses, we know that the high price of healthcare is often a barrier to the working poor receiving adequate care. According to a Harvard study, unpaid healthcare costs cause more than 60 percent of  bankruptcies in America, and one in five American adults struggle to pay their medical bills.  The rate of unpaid medical bills is even higher among working poor earning between 133 percent to 200 percent of the FPL.

Consider, for example, the price of an emergency appendectomy. Assuming the patient gets to the emergency room before the appendix ruptures, the procedure costs upwards of $20,000. For a working-class individual earning $16,243 annually on a silver-level private insurance plan (with 70 percent coverage), the out-of-pocket cost is still an unmanageable $6,000. When that individual is unable to pay the $6,000, the hospital absorbs the cost under “charitable care,” but the hospital has to raise prices on every other patient to balance the books.  Rather than cut healthcare costs, eliminating MinnesotaCare actually raises costs for all Minnesotans.  It’s a gimmick that budgeters try to make it look like they’re doing a good job.

When individuals and families are afraid to go to the doctor because of what it might cost them in the long run, they put off necessary treatment.  This harms our patients’ health while costing them, the hospital, and all Minnesotans more in the long run. Mary didn’t make it; let’s make sure the 105,000 working-class Minnesotans who use MinnesotaCare don’t need to face the same choices she did.

*Name changed to protect confidentiality