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Fact Sheet 2006

The Costs and Benefits of Safe Staffing Ratios
Fact Sheet 2005
The United States is experiencing a severe
shortage of nurses that will intensify as baby
boomers age and the need for health care grows.
While registered nurses are expected to
experience the second largest job growth among
all occupations between 2004 and 2014, a study
by Peter Hart and Associates found one in five
quitting patient care. Most are leaving because
of inadequate staffing. There are insufficient
nurses to do what needs to be done on any given
shift and those who are on duty are exhausted
and stressed.1,2
Adequate nurse staffing is key to patient care
and nurse retention, while inadequate staffing
endangers patients and drives nurses from their
profession. Some hospitals have had success in
retaining their nurses by raising
nurse-to-patient ratios, involving nurses in
decision-making and providing nurses with
opportunities to further their education.
Turnover dropped from 15.3% in 2000 to 10.3% in
2002 at New York Presbyterian Hospital, a
hospital which now has a safe staffing clause in
its contract.3
Not coincidentally, a November 2003 study by the
Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of
Sciences calls for better nurse-to-patient
ratios, limits on mandatory overtime, and nurse
involvement at every level to protect patients.4
Understaffing Endangers Patients’ Lives
·
The Institute of Medicine
concluded that the environment in which nurses
work is a breeding ground for medical errors
which will continue to threaten patient safety
until substantially reformed. The study finds
increased infections, bleeding, and cardiac and
respiratory failure associated with inadequate
nurse staffing.5
·
A 2002 report by the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations stated that the lack of nurses
contributed to nearly a quarter of the
unanticipated problems that result in death or
injury to hospital patients.6
·
A 2002 study by Linda Aiken, PhD,
RN, and others, found that for each additional
patient over four in a nurse’s workload, the
risk of death increases by 7% for surgical
patients. Patients in hospitals with the lowest
nurse-to-patient ratio (eight patients per
nurse) have a 31% greater risk of dying than
those in hospitals with four patients per
nurse. On a national scale, staffing
differences of this magnitude may result in as
many as 20,000 unnecessary deaths each year.7
·
Another recent study found that
patients at hospitals with staffing ratios of
four patients to one nurse or higher suffered
from cardiac arrest or shock 9.4% more often
than patients at hospitals with ratios of 2.5
patients to one nurse or lower. They also had
9% more urinary tract infections, 5% more
gastro-intestinal episodes, and 6.5% more cases
of pneumonia acquired in the hospital. Surgery
patients in short-staffed hospitals were 6% more
likely to die from complications like shock or
sepsis.8
While the most important results related to
inadequate nurse staffing are unanticipated
patient complications and deaths, other costs
include longer hospital stays, higher rates of
occupational injury and stress among nurses,
more turnover among nurses, and more liability
for hospitals. In 1999, the
Institute of Medicine (IOM) estimated that
preventable medical errors cost the economy from
$17 to $29 billion annually, of which half are
health care costs.9
Understaffing Results in Longer Hospital
Stays
·
In 2001, 69% of hospital
executives reported that the shortage of nurses
had resulted in higher costs to deliver care.10
·
A 2001 Harvard School of Public
Health study cites a 3–6% shorter length of stay
for patients in hospitals with a high percentage
of RNs.11
·
The Institute for Health and
Socio-Economic Policy projects annual savings of
about $2 billion a year for California hospitals
just from the shorter patient stays that result
from better RN staffing. The findings are based
on an examination of 21.7 million patient
discharges in California from 1993–1998 and
hospital charges per patient day.12
High Nurse Turnover Is Expensive
Nearly 90% of nurses say that better staffing
ratios would improve recruitment and retention
of nurses.13
Nursefinders, Inc., which conducts a quarterly
nurse staffing survey, estimates the average
cost per RN turnover at $65,000 in 2005. Given
their survey findings that many healthcare
facilities may lose 25 to 60 percent of their
nurses in 2005 alone, the financial impact of
this turnover on affected facilities could range
from $1.6 million to nearly $4 million a year.14
·
Organizations with high annual RN
turnover rates (22–44%) had 36% higher costs per
discharge than hospitals with turnover rates of
12% or less. Hospitals with low turnover had
lowered risk adjusted scores as well as lower
severity-adjusted length of stay compared to
hospitals with 22% or higher turnover rates.15
·
Hospitals with low RN turnover
(4–12%) averaged a 23% return on assets compared
to a 17% return for those with high turnover
rates.16
·
Over 40% of hospitals offer
bonuses to new hires according to the American
Hospital Association. Most offer packages of
between $1,000 and $5,000, but some offer even
more compensation.17
This policy does nothing to reward and retain
experienced nurses and can certainly create
resentment.
·
Nearly 60% of hospitals hire
nurses from temporary agencies or traveling
nurse companies.18
Nationally, hospitals spent $7.2 billion on
temps and travelers in 2000.19
Temps and traveling nurses earn as much as $100
an hour, while staff nurses typically earn less
than $25 per hour, which affects morale among
the nurses who stay.20
·
Hospitals also recruit nurses from
other countries, which removes badly needed
healthcare providers from poor countries, while
also depressing nurses’ wages here.
These solutions do nothing to address the
underlying reason why so many qualified nurses
leave the profession. Better nurse-to-patient
ratios would, however. The Nursefinders survey
finds 57% and 56% of nurses, respectively,
citing work-related stress and patient care
loads/staffing as having a major impact on
turnover, above the impact of compensation.21
What Will
Safe Staffing Ratios Cost Hospitals?
·
A University of California at
Davis study estimates it will cost California
hospitals $1.1 billion annually to implement a
ratio of four patients to one nurse in
medical/surgical units, the standard approved by
the SEIU Nursing Alliance, United Nurses’
Associations of California, and Kaiser
Permanente.
Berliner, et. al., criticized the UC
Davis study on several methodological grounds,
pointing to assumptions which inflate the
estimate by 35% to 40%, as well as data
collection issues, placing the estimate below
$500 million.22
The assumptions include failing to distinguish
between for-profit and non-profit hospitals,
although for-profit hospitals have the leanest
staffing ratios and can best afford to implement
improved staffing ratios; assuming that nurses
cannot be transferred from a unit where there is
a surplus of staff to a unit which is short;
assuming that only full-time nurses would be
hired, when 35% of nurses in California work
part-time; and defining the cost of hiring a new
nurse at the average nurse salary, when it is
plausible that many will be entry-level or
part-time.23
·
Although the validity of the UC
Davis study is questionable, even if the
estimate of $1.1 billion is accurate, the cost
is only a 2.3% increase for California’s $40
billion industry divided among 500 hospitals.24
Moreover, inadequate nurse staffing is costly;
safe staffing ratios allow hospitals to save on
costs associated with patient complications and
liability, nurse turnover, temp agency fees, and
recruiting.
·
A 2002 report by Blue Cross Blue
Shield Association found that California
hospitals could save over $331 million if all
hospitals performed at the level of the best
hospitals in the state in terms of these quality
indicators: adverse events, wound infection,
pneumonia after surgery, and urinary tract
infections.25
These indicators are well-established measures
of nurse staffing quality.
If Berliner and colleagues’ estimate of $500
million as the cost of safe staffing levels is
accurate, the direct costs of complying with the
California safe staffing law would be almost
completely offset by the benefits of improved
nurse staffing quality.
A 2005 national study in the journal Medical
Care found that reducing nurse-to-patient
ratios was cost-effective in improving patient
outcomes. The authors found that the cost of a
life saved by improving nurse-to-patient ratios
is considerably less than by using other basic
safety measures, such as routine cervical cancer
screening or thrombolytic therapy for heart
attack patients. These cost estimates don’t
even include the additional savings from reduced
length of hospital stays which are associated
with lower staffing ratios; the study estimates
these savings may offset fully half of the added
labor costs.26
More States are Pursuing Safe Staffing
Legislation
In January 2004 California became the first
state to implement mandatory nurse-to-patient
ratios. State labor and nurses’ organizations
fought successfully to keep the legislation in
its original form (requiring one nurse per six
patients starting in January 2004, increasing to
one nurse per five patients by January 2005),
despite an attempt by California Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger to block the second increase.27
Preliminary studies on the effect of this
legislation indicate that staffing levels have
increased significantly in California hospitals,
and that contrary to concerns, hospitals did not
seek to meet the new requirements by increasing
their use of LVNs. More studies will be needed
to determine the effect on patient outcomes.28
Meanwhile, several other states have enacted or
put into motion legislation addressing safe
staffing levels. For instance:
·
In 2004, New Jersey passed
legislation requiring hospitals to disclose
staffing information. An as-yet unsuccessful
bill requiring staffing ratios is expected to be
reintroduced in early 2006.
·
In 2005, Rhode Island enacted
legislation requiring hospitals to annually
submit a staffing plan.29
·
In 2005, Oregon updated and
strengthened its 2001 legislation requiring
hospitals to appoint a staffing plan committee
and take other measures to ensure timely filling
of vacancies.30
In 2002, Texas put in place similar regulations
to the original Oregon staffing plan
legislation.31
·
Many states, including
Connecticut, New York, and Kansas, have
introduced nurse-to-patient ratio legislation;
several others have introduced staffing-plan
bills, including Indiana, Hawaii, Massachusetts,
Maryland, Vermont, Washington, and West
Virginia.32
Nurses Return to Nursing When Safe Staffing
Ratios Are Implemented
·
The California Board of Nursing
reports being inundated with RN applicants from
other states because of the nurse-to-patient
ratio regulations that went into effect in
January 2004. With a more than 60% increase in
applications for licenses it now takes six or
more weeks to get a temporary license and as
much as three or four months to get a permanent
one.33
California has experienced more interest in
nursing since the nurse ratio legislation was
passed in 1999.
·
The number of RNs increased by 4%
from June 2001 to June 2002 and the number of
certifying exam applicants rose by 18%.34
·
Kaiser Permanente voluntarily
enacted ratios before the California law went
into effect in July 2001. As a result, the
Northern California branch of Kaiser hired 71%
more new nurses and the number of nurses
quitting declined by 47% from January to October
2002, a net increase in RNs of 570% over the
previous year.35
·
Testimony from California RNs
confirms the benefits of staffing ratios. A
study by UC San Francisco’s Center for Health
Professions found that nurses from California
express concern about staffing more than any
other topic, regardless of whether they work for
for-profit or non-profit healthcare
organizations or whether they belong to a
union. Staffing ratios have been required in
critical care units in California hospitals and
nurses consistently cite ratios as a draw to
work in these units because they know they will
be able to provide high quality care to their
patients.36
·
A UC San Francisco study estimated
that in 2004, 11,000 “travelers”—U.S.-trained
nurses who bounce from hospital to hospital on
short contracts—moved to California in the wake
of the staffing-ratio legislation, along with
3,700 foreign-trained nurses.37
The nurse crisis is a global phenomenon. In
2000, the Australian state of Victoria
implemented staffing ratios as part of a
strategy to recruit and retain nurses in their
state and met with remarkable success.
·
Six months after the ratios were
fully implemented, 3,300 nurses returned to work
full-time.38
·
A preeminent technical institute
in Victoria reported that the number of
graduating students planning to study nursing
increased by 144%.
·
One major hospital reported that
its costs for temp agencies fell by 83%.
Another hospital reported that its costs for
temp agencies fell by 83%, while yet another
major hospital now has 19 nurses on a waiting
list to work in its emergency department.
1
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of
Labor Statistics, BLS Releases
2004–2014 Employment Projections,
USDL 05-2276,
www.bls.gov/emp.
2 Peter D. Hart and
Associates, The Nurse Shortage:
Perspectives from Current Direct Care
Nurses and Former Direct Care Nurses.
3 Cadrain, Diane,
HR Magazine, December 2002.
4 Institute of
Medicine, National Academy of Sciences,
Keeping Patients Safe: Transforming the
Work Environment of Nurses, 2003.
6 Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations, Healthcare at the
Crossroads: Strategies for Addressing
the Nursing Crisis, August 2002.
7 Aiken, Linda,
Journal of the American Medical
Association, October 22, 2002.
8 Needleman, Jack, et
al., “Nurse-Staffing Levels and Quality
of Care in Hospitals,” The New
England Journal of Medicine, May 30,
2002.
9 Institute of
Medicine, To Err is Human: Building
a Better Health Care System, 1999.
10 Solving the Nursing
Shortage – The Scope of the Shortage,
American Federation of Government
Employees, 2002.
15 L. Gelinas &
Bohlen, C., “The Business Case for
Retention”, Journal of Clinical
Systems Management, 4 (78), 14–16,
22.
17 Hansen, Brian,
“Nursing Shortage: Are Bad Working
Conditions Causing Deaths?”, CQ
Researcher, September 20, 2002.
19 California Nurses
Association press release, “CNA Blasts
Study on Alleged Costs of Safe Staffing,
Implementing Ratios May be Cost Neutral,
RNs Say”, July 26, 2001.
20 Hansen, Brian,
op. cit.
21 Nursefinders, Inc.,
op. cit.
22 Berliner, Howard,
Christine Kovner, and Carolyn Zhu,
Nurse Staffing Ratios in California
Hospitals: A Critique of the Final
Report on Hospital Nursing Staff Ratios
and Quality of Care, SEIU Nurse
Alliance, December 2002.
25 Kane, Nancy, and
Richard B. Siegrist, Jr., “Understanding
Rising Hospital Inpatient Costs: Key
Components of Cost and the Impact of
Poor Quality”, August 2002, http://bcbshealthissues.com/costpressconf/materials.vtml.
26 Rothberg, Michael,
et. al., “Improving Nurse-to-Patient
Staffing Ratios As a Cost-Effective
Safety Intervention”, Medical Care
43(8): 785–791, August 2005.
27 Associated Press
State & Local Wire, “Schwarzenegger
Drops Legal Fight Over Nurse Staffing
Ratios”, November 11, 2005.
28 Donaldson, N. et
al. “Impact of California’s
Nurse-Patient Ratios on Unit Level Nurse
Staffing and Patient Outcomes”.
Policy, Politics & Nursing Practice,
August 2005,
http://ppn.sagepub.com.
33 Robertson, Kathy,
Sacramento Business Journal,
January 19, 2004.
34 Kemski, Ann,
Market Forces, Cost Assumptions, and
Nurse Supply: Considerations in
Determining Appropriate Nurse to Patient
Rations in General Acute Care Hospitals
R-37-01, SEIU Nurse Alliance,
December 2002.
35 Kaiser Permanente
California press release, “Kaiser
Permanente Innovations Attracting
Nurses”, October 22, 2002.
37 Los Angeles Times,
“Search for Nurses in California is
Feverish”, November 23, 2005.
38 Fitzpatrick, Lisa,
The Herald Sun, March 15, 2003.
For
further information on professional
workers, check out DPE’s Web site:
www.dpeaflcio.org.
The
Department for Professional Employees,
AFL-CIO (DPE) comprises 23 AFL-CIO
unions representing over four million
people working in professional,
technical and administrative support
occupations. DPE-affiliated unions
represent: teachers, college professors
and school administrators; library
workers; nurses, doctors and other
health care professionals; engineers,
scientists and IT workers; journalists
and writers, broadcast technicians and
communications specialists; performing
and visual artists; professional
athletes; professional firefighters;
psychologists, social workers and many
others. DPE was chartered by the
AFL-CIO in 1977 in recognition of the
rapidly-growing professional and
technical occupations.
Source: Department for
Professional Employees
Research Department
815 16th Street, NW,
N.W., 7th Floor
Washington, DC 20006
Contact: Pamela Wilson
(202) 638-6684
pwilson@dpeaflcio.org
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