Shortage of Nurses Hurts Patient Care, Study Finds
By DENISE GRADY


In hospitals with low numbers of registered nurses, patients are more
likely to suffer complications like urinary infections and pneumonia,
to stay in the hospital longer and to die from treatable conditions
like shock or gastrointestinal bleeding, researchers report today.
"I estimate that hundreds or, perhaps, thousands of deaths each year
are due to low staffing," said Dr. Jack Needleman, an economist at
the Harvard School of Public Health and the lead author of a study on
staffing published today in The New England Journal of Medicine.
The nation has a serious nursing shortage, with 126,000 jobs
unfilled, 12 percent of capacity, says the American Hospital
Association. The shortage is a result of hospital mergers, layoffs
and heavy workloads. Many hospital nurses shifted to other work. The
average salary, $46,000 a year, has not increased much in a decade.
Even though hospitals are trying to hire again, nurses are no longer
available.
The new study, paid mostly by the government, is one of the largest
to look at care in relation to staffing. The findings were based on a
computer analysis of the discharge records of more than six million
patients at 799 hospitals in 11 states in 1997. Five million had
medical problems. One million had surgery.
The research sought to find out whether there was a correlation
between how patients fared and the levels of registered nurses and
two other types of workers with less training, licensed practical
nurses and aides. 
Registered nurses receive several years of training and usually hold
associate's or bachelor's degrees. Practical nurses usually have high
school diplomas and a year of training. Aides have less training. 
The researchers found that for certain aspects of care just nurses
made a difference. In hospitals with higher nurse staffing, stays
were 3 to 5 percent shorter, and complication rates 2 to 9 percent
lower than in hospitals with lower staffing. No relation was found
between patients' well-being or length of stay and the levels of
aides or practical nurses.
Registered nurses, Dr. Needleman said, are "the eyes and ears of the
hospital" for judging whether a patient is recovering normally. 
"If something is going wrong," he said, "they can catch the signs
early, before the problem gets worse." 
But problems cannot be spotted early, he added, if nurses do not have
time to observe their patients.
The president of the American Nurses Association, Mary E. Foley,
said, "We're very pleased that another large set of research data has
validated what the American Nurses Association has been saying since
the mid-90's, that there is a direct effect on the outcome of patient
care when you have enough nurses."
As an example, Ms. Foley said, pneumonia and blood clots in
hospitalized patients often result from immobility, and nurses help
prevent such complications by turning and repositioning bedridden
patients, encouraging them to exercise and cough and helping others
to get up and walk around. Even if nurses themselves do not do those
things for patients, they have the training and experience to know
when such help is needed and to ensure it is provided. 
A senior vice president for policy at the American Hospital
Association, Carmela Coyle, said: "The study suggests that registered
nurses are key and critical to insuring good patient care. This is
something that hospitals and patients have known for some time."
Ms. Coyle said she feared that the study would lead some people to
assume that health care problems could be solved by laws that require
specific staffing ratios, a move that hospital trade groups have long
resisted. She called such a reaction overly simplistic.
"What you really need to look at," Ms. Coyle said, "is much more than
the number of nurses and the number of patients. How many of the
nurses have 20 years of experience or more, and how many are right
out of school? What technology is there to support them? How sick are
the patients?"
Dr. Needleman said his group made its study because the government
sought to fill a large research gap on the connection between nurse
staffing and quality of care. In the early 1990's, nurses testified
to Congress that patients in some hospitals were endangered by
managed-care companies that were trying to save money by replacing
registered nurses with less skilled and lower paid workers. Congress
asked the Institute of Medicine to study the issue. In a report in
1996, the institute said there was not enough data to draw
conclusions and called on the government to finance studies.
Dr. Needleman's is one of those. It measured staffing two ways, by
the proportion of nursing hours provided by each type of worker and
by the number of hours a day the types of workers devoted to each
patient. 
For registered nurses, the average number of hours a day per patient
worked out to eight. The hours included not only time spent at the
bedside, but also time spent preparing medication, writing chart
reports and consulting colleagues or family members.
The averages include intensive care units, with one nurse for every
one or two patients around the clock.
"There were some hospitals, that if I were going to them as a
patient, I would be very concerned," Dr. Needleman said. "The
hospitals at the very low end of our sample had as little as two
hours, and some at the high end had 16 hours."
When the study compared the hospitals in the top quarter with those
in the bottom quarter on the proportion of nursing time from
registered nurses, it found that the medical patients, as opposed to
surgical patients, in the bottom quarter had stays 3.5 percent
longer, 9 percent more urinary infections, 5.1 percent more
gastrointestinal bleeding, 6.4 percent more pneumonia and 9.4 percent
more shock or cardiac arrest. 
In addition, the death rate was 2.5 percent higher for "failure to
rescue," meaning that the patients died from conditions that might
have been reversed if they had been treated in time. Those conditions
include pneumonia, shock or cardiac arrest, upper gastrointestinal
bleeding, sepsis or a blood clot.

http://nytimes.com/2002/05/30/health/30NURS.html



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