Tuesday, March 10, 2020

National Nurses United -- The Need For Resources and Precautions To Fight Coronavirus



According to a survey released by nurse union organization National Nurses United, 44% of nurses said their employer provided them with information to identify potential coronavirus cases. Only 19% of the 6,500 nurses across 48 states surveyed knew if their employer had policies to address if workers were potentially exposed to the virus.”

-- Steven Ross Johnson, Modern Healthcare (March 6, 2020)

The survey, conducted by the nation’s largest professional nursing union (March 3, 2020), found less than a third of nurses reported that their employers had enough protective equipment on hand to protect staff in the event of a surge of infections. And just 29 percent said their employers had a plan to isolate possible coronavirus patients.


Nurses are working without necessary personal protective equipment and lack education and training for handling the disease, said National Nurses United director Bonnie Castillo. Castillo says …

Nurses are confident we can care for COVID-19 patients, and even help stop the spread of this virus, IF we are given the protections and resources we need to do our job. This is not the time to relax our approach or weaken existing state or federal regulations. This is the time to step up all of our efforts.”

Cathy Kennedy, a neonatal intensive care unit RN and NNU vice president who works at Kaiser Permanente in Roseville, Calif., where the first California COVID-19 patient just died, explains …

The lines of communication between our employers and frontline staff on protocols for coronavirus and suspected coronavirus patients are not open for all shifts and all units. What happens when there is a lack of clear communication both ways between staff and management? Rumor and falsehoods fill the void, stoking unnecessary fear and anxiety. And the information nurses do get is contradictory.”

The NNU petitioned the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration to adopt an emergency temporary standard to protect health care workers, patients, and the public. Currently, no enforceable OSHA infectious diseases standard exists nationally.

And in recent days, NNU has heard discussion about the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) weakening its current guidance even further, including recommending surgical masks instead of respirators for nurses providing care to patients with COVID-19. NNU is opposed to these changes.

Among their demands, NNU states …

Employers shall implement plans and protocols in response to COVID-19 based on the precautionary principle which holds that lacking scientific consensus that a proposed action, policy, or act is not harmful – particularly if that harm has the potential to be catastrophic – such action, policy, or act should not be implemented and the maximum safeguards should be pursued.”

– “Survey of Nation’s Frontline Registered Nurses Shows Hospitals Unprepared For COVID-19” Press Release, National Nurses United/California Nurses Association (March 05, 2020)

In other words, the precautionary principle posits “when you don’t know what you’re dealing with, go above and beyond to protect the safety of those involved. Do as much as you can, not the least you can get away with.”

The foundation of the precautionary principle is conveyed by the common-sense advice to “err on the side of caution.” The principle is based on a desire to prevent harm to the environment, humans, other living creatures and ecological systems. It is a value statement, intended as an approach to decision-making, which asks decision-makers, policymakers and communities to consider the full range of direct and indirect costs of our decisions to health and the environment, even when full scientific certainty about potential harmful effects is lacking.

The NNU also demands all registered nurses and other health care workers must receive the highest level of protection in their workplaces, as determined by the precautionary principle:

1. The CDC must improve screening criteria and testing capacity to ensure prompt recognition of and response to COVID-19 cases.

2. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration must promulgate an Emergency Temporary Standard to protect healthcare workers from emerging infectious diseases like COVID-19 as soon as possible.

3. Congress and the administration must ensure that any vaccine or treatment for COVID-19 that is developed with U.S. taxpayer dollars is provided to the American public when needed for free.

4.Congress must act immediately to pass an emergency spending package to fund the emergency response to the COVID-19 outbreak.



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