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Workplace News

Workplace Issues / Workplace News

Hours-based staffing needs reform

Lamp Editorial Team
|
July 3, 2018

Our public hospitals need a simpler, more accountable ratios system.

Public hospital staffing based on nursing hours per patient day (NHPPD), must be improved to account for skill mix and daily fluctuations in patient numbers, says nurse unit manager Darryl Petersen.

Darryl, the NUM of Blacktown Hospital’s aged care ward, believes the NHPPD system is “open to wide interpretation” and can be manipulated to reduce effective staff numbers.

He supports the NSWNMA’s 2018 award claim for a simpler, more accountable ratios system.

“We need ratios that ensure we have enough staff with the required skills to care for our patients. The current system gives us staff numbers only,” he says.

Blacktown’s aged care ward has 12 patients plus one flex bed and is staffed by three nurses plus the NUM on morning shift.

“Our staffing is often one RN, one EN and one AiN – the lowest skill mix we can possibly have,” Darryl says.

“This morning I had two RNs and an EN on the roster, but one RN was moved to another ward and replaced with an AiN.

“Replacing RNs with AiNs reduces the level of care available to my patients without a doubt. It means we can’t always attend to their clinical needs in a timely manner.

“Recovery care is sometimes delayed because there are not enough skilled nurses available.”

Darryl says the practice of counting patients at midnight understates the true number to be cared for.

“We quite often use the 13th bed during the day with the number of occupied beds dropping to 12 by midnight.”

He supports the union’s award claim for the in-charge nurse not to be allocated a patient load.

“On mornings I am the team leader for three other staff who carry patient loads. As team leader I manage ward activity such as admissions and discharges.

“However, on afternoon shift, the senior nurse acts as team leader and also has a patient load. That significantly reduces the level of care that can be provided compared to morning shift.

“The same problem applies on nights and weekends to varying extents.

“In order to maintain an equal standard of care for our patients 24/7 we need a dedicated in-charge nurse without a patient load for every shift.

“I would be open to some flexibility about the NUM being the team leader in the morning. But I would definitely advocate a team leader without a patient load for afternoon and night shifts.”

Darryl says inadequate staffing often causes delays in non-clinical care and management of patients.

“In the aged care ward we are very involved with patients’ families. We may be trying to maintain a person’s ability to continue to live safely at home. Or, we are working with a family to make plans for their relative to go into some level of care or service provision at home.

“These decisions require intensive interaction between patient, family and staff and it’s very difficult to do that when we are spread so thin.”

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