Ontario Nurses' Association calls on government to end RN cuts and hospital underfunding:
RN care needed for safe, high-quality patient care
TORONTO, Jan. 16, 2014 /CNW/ - The Ontario Nurses' Association (ONA) today called on the provincial government to end the underfunding of Ontario hospitals and cuts to RN positions. In keeping with the government's signal that it wants to focus on job creation, ONA is also calling for funding of a multi-year action plan to hire and maintain registered nursing positions in all health care sectors.
In a presentation to the Standing Committee on Finance & Economic Affairs, Vicki McKenna, RN, ONA's First Vice-President, cited research that shows the direct link between registered nurse staffing levels and improved health outcomes for patients. She notes that the current cuts to hospital RN jobs and clinical services are a direct result of base hospital funding that has been less than the rate of inflation and cost of population growth since fiscal 2008, and has been zero per cent in the last two fiscal years. This has resulted in millions of hours of RN care cuts.
"It's a dirty little secret that Ontario has the second-lowest RN-to-population ratio, with just seven RNs per 1,000 Ontarians," notes ONA President Linda Haslam-Stroud, RN. "Polls have shown how important health care is to Ontarians. To bring this province up to the national average RN-to-population ratio, Ontario has to hire 17,500 more registered nurses. It's vital that we begin to close this gap."
RN staffing levels in many of our hospitals have put patients at risk. Increasingly, Ontario hospitals are looking to balance budgets by replacing RNs with less-skilled workers, leaving workloads unmanageable for nurses and dangerous for patients.
Haslam-Stroud says that there is a dire need for more RNs to meet the increased care needs of the complex, unstable patients in our hospitals. "Patients with alternate level of care needs are increasingly being moved to the community sector," she notes. "RN staffing levels in hospitals have not kept pace with the increasingly complex care needed by hospital patients, and are not keeping patients or nurses safe."
The literature shows that for every extra patient added to an average RN's workload, patient complications and death rates increase by seven per cent. Ontario has lost millions of hours of RN care in the past two years due to RN cuts. In the long-term care sector, the minimum staffing standard for RNs is one per facility – no matter how many residents the facility cares for. This has endangered patients and staff. In addition, lost-time injuries and illnesses of RNs has increased, leaving RNs with the highest injury rate of all sectors, and the second-highest injury rate from violence.
ONA believes that ending RN cuts and cuts to hospital funding fits into the government's plan for economic growth that focuses on strategic investments in jobs, public services and infrastructure.
ONA's recommendations also include consolidating a culture of safety in the health care sector, funding a regulated minimum staffing standard for long-term care homes and implementing a policy of wage parity for home care nurses to build nurse staffing capacity. "It's time for the Ontario government to step up for patients," says Haslam-Stroud. "It is essential to properly staff our hospitals to meet patient care needs. Ontarians deserve no less care than patients in the rest of the country."
ONA is the union representing 60,000 registered nurses and allied health professionals, as well as more than 14,000 nursing student affiliates providing care in hospitals, long-term care facilities, public health, the community, clinics and industry.
Visit us at: www.ona.org; Facebook.com/OntarioNurses; Twitter.com/OntarioNurses
SOURCE: Ontario Nurses' Association
Ontario Nurses' Association, Sheree Bond, (416) 964-1979 ext.2430, cell: (416) 986-8240, [email protected]; Melanie Levenson, (416) 964-1979 ext. 2369, [email protected]
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