Workers face difficult battle in U.S. hospitals battered by recession

The February edition of the U.S. Labour Notes reports staff in U.S. hospitals face further reorganization, more work, less training and employers trying to extract concessions in bargaining. Michigan critical care nurse Shawn Shuler told the magazine that squeezing workers makes little sense – patient complications that develop when overworked staff miss a problem cost the hospital more than a proper staffing policy would. Shuler’s employer, The Borgess Medical Center in Kalamazoo, has lost 52 critical care nurses in the last year.  In Philadelphia, Temple University Health System tried to gag workers from speaking out. They unsuccessfully sought to fine the union $250,000 if a worker spoke out about hospital conditions. Temple has demanded a non-disparagement clause in bargaining, along with wage freezes and a 50 per cent cut to pensions. The magazine reports a strike is inevitable.

In Brief: Defending Medicare, funding a hospital, and voting for a favourite doctor

As voters go to the polls in the Toronto Centre by-election, the Ontario government has pledged $15 million to save the Toronto Grace Health Centre. With new money in hand, the Salvation Army reversed its decision to cease operating the aging facility. The NDP have made hospital funding a core issue in the byelection. Curiously, Health Minister Deb Matthews said “we have not let a hospital close under our watch and I can assure you we would not let the Grace.” Fort Erie, Port Colborne and Shelburne may beg to differ. … Ontario is rebuilding 4,183 existing beds and updating facilities at 37 long-term care homes. The government has pledged to redevelop 35,000 older beds in a decade-long plan. Now if they would only fund adequate staff to provide the care. … The Ontario Health Coalition is urging members to vote for Dr. Gordon Guyatt for the British Medical Journal’s life-time achievement award. For 30 years Guyatt has been a leading advocate for universal, publicly funded health care. You can vote at www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full339/dec29_2/b5546 . … Dr. Michael Rachlis defends Canadian heart care as “good as the best centres in the U.S.” in an opinion piece in today’s Toronto Star. U.S. Medicare critics have jumped on Newfoundland Premier Danny Williams for seeking heart surgery in their country, claiming this was evidence of Canadian Medicare’s inadequacy. Rachlis points out that very few Canadians seek such surgery in the U.S., while Americans are known to come to Toronto for valve surgery, for which the city is world famous. A 2002 study by American and Canadian academics found that one out of 500 Canadian hospitalizations occurred in the U.S. and 80 per cent of these were for pregnancy-related conditions – women going into labour while travelling. Another 10 per cent were for other emergency conditions, meaning about one in 5,000 Canadian hospitalizations in the U.S. were for patients deliberately seeking elective care, like Williams. To read the full article, go to http://www.thestar.com/opinion/article/760217–medicare-attack-dogs-barking-up-wrong-tree

Cambridge Save Our Hospital Town Hall Meeting

The Cambridge Health Coalition is holding a public meeting on hospital cuts on Sunday, February 28th at 1 pm. The meeting will take place at the Cambridge Newfoundland Club, 1500 Dunbar Road. Speakers include Orville Thacker, Waterloo Regional Health Coalition Chair; Natalie Mehra, OHC Director; and Brenda Pugh from the Ontario Nurses Association. All are welcome.

In Brief: The Ottawa Hospital could lose eight per cent of its beds if a funding freeze takes place / Windsor Regional Hospital CEO crows of new jobs while layoffs continue to be issued / More

The Ottawa Citizen reported today that a funding freeze would require The Ottawa Hospital would lose 100 of its 1,200 beds, or eight per cent of its total capacity. In addition it would need to close six to eight operating rooms to cover a $43 million deficit on a budget of $970 million. In total, six Ottawa area hospitals would lose 163 beds and have to chop $65.3 million. … Amid layoffs at the Windsor Regional Hospital and the Windsor Hotel Dieu Hospital, a Windsor business magazine has run a cheerful story on how hundreds of jobs will be coming to the community through the expansion of the Windsor Regional Hospital. “It’s huge,” said hospital CEO David Musyj, telling the magazine there will be a “broad spectrum” of jobs, including RNs, RPNs, housekeepers, food and nutrition workers, porters, occupational and recreational therapists. One has to wonder whether Musyj has shared this with his HR department, who may have to spend heavily to recruit back those they are presently giving layoff notice to. … OPSEU VON home support workers may be hitting the picket line later this month if their employer insists on cutting back on their paid travel time. This is despite a huge geographic area covered by these workers.  … North Bay’s municipal council voted unanimously in support of keeping 31 psychiatric rehabilitation beds in their city. With the North East Mental Health Centre moving to the North Bay Regional Health Centre (NBRHC) in about a year, a committee is looking at three options for the beds – send them to Sudbury, Sault Ste Marie or keep them in North Bay. Space for the 31 beds was never incorporated into the design of the new NBRHC. Loss of the beds would mean the loss of about 62 direct jobs. The committee is expected to make its recommendations at the end of March.

Health care workers face anxiety, fatigue, burnout as a result of “role overload” — study

“If I compare the situation right now to the one several years ago, there are the same number of beds and the same number of patients but fewer staff. This means that we have to work nights/weekends. It is so difficult to claim for overtime, I just end up working for free. All work, no recognition – it just gets to you after a while.”

– focus group participant in a recent study on role overload.

Role overload means feeling that you have too much to do and not enough time in which to do it.

Role overload has been linked to increased levels of anxiety, fatigue, burnout, depression and emotional and physiological stress and to decreased satisfaction with family and work.

A recent WSIB-funded study by three business professors sheds new light on the impact of underfunding on the hospital workplace.

“The Etiology and Reduction of Role Overload in Canada’s Health Care Sector” interviewed workers at four Ottawa hospitals. In addition, 1400 workers filled out in-depth surveys – the majority (84 per cent) were female. The majority of Allied health professionals and technical staff were members of OPSEU. Authored by Dr. Linda Duxbury (Carleton University), Dr. Christopher Higgins (University of Western Ontario) and Dr. Sean Lyons (Univeristy of Guelph), the 213-page report looks at causes and possible solutions to role overload.

Looking at previous studies, the authors note that compared to other professions, health professionals have the lowest level of trust in their employers, lowest level of commitment to their employers, the lowest ratings of workplace communications, the least influence on workplace decisions and least supportive and healthy workplaces.

One study notes the “quality of work life among health care workers has deteriorated to the point where it is impeding the capacity of the system to recruit and retain the staff needed to provide effective patient care.”

Canadians in health occupations miss more work due to illness or disability than other occupations. A CMA survey indicated nearly half of Canadian physicians were in an advanced state of burnout.

The reasons for workload were many, including the most obvious – staff shortages.

Despite the government’s emphasis on multi-disciplinary teams, health care workers pointed out this contributed to the sense of overwork given the time needed to coordinate, schedule, and communicate. The focus groups highlighted the need for constant repeating and rehashing of issues. They also noted that there was a lack of training in how to work in teams.

Workers also complained they could never get away from work – requests for vacation and lieu days were often denied, while taking sick time often meant coming back to even more work. People complained there was no coverage for lunch or breaks.

With hospitals required to provide a greater data stream, front line workers spoke about the demand for documentation has increased over the last several years while time to complete it had decreased.

“The documentation has to be done – for due diligence, for professional standards, for administration – but there is no time in the day for it,” said one focus group participant. “I often end up doing it on my own time, and resenting it. I did not go into this profession to be a secretary.”

Seemingly contradictory, the hospital workers suggested that there was not enough communications and too much communications. Lack of transparency led them to feeling harassed and under pressure. On the other hand, they also felt bombarded by messages, making it difficult to distinguish what was important.

Other contributors included the lack of training and training time, too few resources, the high expectation of patients and their families, the requirement to wear too many hats, the unpredictability of their jobs and the feeling that work was never finished.

Managers were stressed by a lack of job security, particularly after leaving a unionized environment.

One manager told the study: “I spent too much of my time selling and implementing new changes – there is no time to evaluate the change and quite honestly, find it hard to convince others that this is the right thing to do when I am not convinced myself – but I have no choice.”

Management were the group with the highest level of turnover – only 44 per cent of managers had been in their jobs longer than five years.

Para-Medical/Allied health suggested that this group was the most impacted by lack of resources.

Physicians said resources allocated for the government’s wait times strategy actually meant patients outside of those priority areas had to wait longer. They said physicians in private clinics were taking the “easy” patients, leaving physicians working in the hospitals with more complex patients.

Respondents made three suggestions to personally cope with overload – make sure you have some downtime, have positive interactions with colleagues, and set life priorities, not just work priorities.

The suggestion for their hospitals was more varied: provide adequate support, respect and recognize the work they do, provide adequate rewards, allow time to regroup and socialize with colleagues, improve the leadership and culture, improve communication, fix/improve infrastructure, and provide more resources.

More from this report in coming days. To download the full report, go to:

http://www.sprott.carleton.ca/news/2010/docs/complete-report.pdf

 For the Executive Summary, go to:

http://www.sprott.carleton.ca/news/2010/docs/executive-summary.pdf

Hession confirmed as new Chair of e-Health

Ontario has confirmed Raymond Hession as the new Chair of eHealth Ontario’s board of directors for a three-year term. The appointment, made by Order-In-Council, took effect February 1, 2010.

Ray Hession of Ottawa is the immediate past chair of the Board of Governors of The Ottawa Hospital. He is currently chair of the Minister’s Advisory Committee on Service Canada, chair of the Cooperative Housing Agency of Canada. Previously, Mr. Hession had been employed in various positions including: deputy minister in the federal government; President & CEO of PAXPORT Inc., an airport development company; President and CEO of Kinburn Technologies Ltd., an information technology holding company; Industry Manager, Government, Education and Medical, IBM Canada Ltd.; Director, Ottawa Health Research Institute; Director, University of Ottawa Heart Institute; chair of the Rehabilitation Center of Ottawa; and, trustee of the Royal Ottawa Health Care Group.

Fort Erie Mayor challenges recent claims made by health minister

Fort Erie Mayor Doug Martin fired off a letter to Ontarios health minister, Deborah Matthews, challenging recent comments she made in The Globe & Mail that the closing of the emergency room in the hospital in his municipality was undertaken to provide better health care for residents and not to save money. See: http://niagaraatlarge.com/2010/01/29/south-niagara-mayor-community-activist-take-shots-at-province-over-eroding-hospital-services/

Saskatchewan health care workers get “take it or leave it” offer

More than 25,000 health care providers in Saskatchewan saw talks collapse last week between them and the government and the Saskatchewan Association of Health Organizations (SAHO). The province and SAHO presented a “take it or leave it offer,” cancelled bargaining dates and then contacted the media.

The employers’ final offer increases the wage offer by 0.1 per cent (to 9.5 per cent over four years) and contains many concessions.

The 25,000 health care providers in the province have been without new collective agreements for almost two years. They include special care aides, licensed practical nurses, food services workers, laundry, housekeeping and activity personnel, maintenance, administrative, clerical, emergency medical personnel, therapeutic and diagnostic technologists, and recreational workers.

See: http://www.publicvalues.ca/ViewArticle.cfm?Ref=00573

In Brief: Ombudsman report on LHIN expected soon / Emergency Physician calls for standards in wake of Niagara death / RNAO drafts election priorities / More…

Ontario Ombudsman Andre Marin has completed his investigation into the process used in two key Local Health Integration Network (LHIN) decisions. The ombudsman received 37 complaints about the Hamilton Niagara Haldimand Brant LHIN from residents, community associations, health care professionals and a Hamilton-area MPP. The complaints stemmed from decisions to reorganize services at the Niagara Health System and at Hamilton Health Sciences. The Ombudsman’s office has told the media that the findings will be released in the next several weeks. … Dr. Alan Drummond, speaking on behalf of the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians, said national standards are needed in planning emergency care. “Let’s decide what we as a nation are going to accept in terms of time and and distance to effective emergency care, because that doesn’t seem to be defined by anybody,” he told the Canadian Press. Drummond was responding to the recent death of an 18-year-old Niagara woman who died before being able to reach the Welland Hospital. Her family believe her life may have been saved had she been able to go to the former Fort Erie hospital. Fort Erie’s ER was closed due to budget restraints last year. “Why don’t we take this opportunity of this tragic death to say, ‘look, let’s re-dedicate ourselves to planning effectively. Let’s not make health care decisions based on budgetary constraints within regional health authorities.” BC is the only province in Canada that has developed such standards. The province has stipulated that 98 per cent of residents in a region should be able to get access to an emergency department within an hour. … The Registered Nurses Association of Ontario has released a paper challenging the provincial political parties to adopt platforms that strengthen the health care system and improve communities. Creating Vibrant Communities: RNAO’s Challenge to Ontario’s Political Parties outlines key policy priorities for the nursing association. Copies can be downloaded from the RNAO web site at http://www.rnao.org/ …Dan Carriere, CEO of Southlake Regional Health Centre, will head up the Peer Review of the Peterborough Regional Health Centre. Carriere has been CEO of the Newmarket based hospital for 16 years. The final report is expected at the end of April. … Four hospitals in the Central East LHIN are getting additional money through the $10 million provincial growth fund. The fund is intended to make adjustments to the budget of hospitals situated in regions with high population growth. Lakeridge Health is receiving $1,054,400 – enough the pull the hospital out of deficit for the first time since amalgamation. Rouge Valley will receive an additional $236,400, Northumberland Hills will get $63,800, and Campbellford Memorial will get $55,400.

OPSEU asks for moratorium on job loss in North Bay

NORTH BAY – A proposal to transfer 31 psychiatric rehabilitation beds out of the city of North Bay will mean the loss of dozens of jobs, warns the union representing staff at North East Mental Health Centre (NEMHC).

OPSEU is asking for a moratorium on any bed transfers until the full impact to the community is known.

Sue Brown, OPSEU Regional Vice-President and member of Local 636 at NEMHC, says that the loss of these beds will not only affect patient care, but could impact 50-100 jobs in North Bay.

“This area can’t afford to lose any more stable, well-paying jobs,” Brown said. “We must make every attempt to keep these patient services in North Bay.” At issue is a so-called “lack of space” at the new North Bay Hospital.

Services at NEMHC will be amalgamated into the hospital when the scheduled closure of NEMHC occurs in early 2011, and the hospital says there is no room for the 31 psychiatric beds.

OPSEU Local 636 president Jackie Smythe says that every attempt must be made to keep services and jobs in North Bay.

“Recommendations to the Local Health Integration Network (LHIN) are that the beds be moved to Sudbury or Sault Ste. Marie,” Smythe said. “We need to know what the full extent of the job loss will be here before a decision like that is made.” At a meeting held Monday night, North Bay city council voted unanimously in favour of a motion to keep the 31 beds in North Bay.