Washington
State Senator Maureen Walsh (R-Walla Walla), became a national headline this
week for alleging that “[nurses] probably play cards for a considerable amount
of the day” during debate on legislation mandating break periods. Many nurses have mailed decks of cards to
Senator Walsh and posted pictures of blood-spattered emergency department walls
in order to call attention to “last night’s card game,” driving home the point
that they aren’t “playing” anything at work.
Senator
Walsh has since apologized. But the
mistaken beliefs which underlie her statements should not be overlooked. Many politicians are out of touch with
everyday Americans. This is not about
one legislator, one legislative body, or even one political party.
This is
about the safety and protection of healthcare professionals and their patients.
And it is time for the public to pay attention to the disrespect of nurses and
other healthcare professionals.
The purpose
of Senate Bill 1155 was to guarantee uninterrupted meal and rest periods for
nurses and medical technicians working in hospitals. This piece of legislation was important and necessary,
especially after the tidal wave of hospital consolidation that swept the nation
over the past few years. Senator Walsh
believed this mandate was financially burdensome for rural hospitals so argued
for exempting critical access hospitals with fewer than 25 beds. While debating to include this amendment to
the bill, she earned the contempt of every nurse and physician in the
country.
The
viability of rural hospitals, fighting to remain financially solvent despite
implementation of additional mandates, must be balanced with the need for
nurses working 12-hour shifts to have protected time for meals or breaks. Both are important and a viable resolution exists
somewhere in between. Sacrificing meals and breaks for nursing staff
already dangerously spread thin is not the solution to keep rural hospitals
afloat. And indeed, Senate Bill 1155 passed with
bipartisan support and will now head to the Governor’s desk for signing.
The
Senator’s condescending statements about the work ethic of nurses reveals that
their role in healthcare is misunderstood and underappreciated. Nurses have an impossible job. They assume the primary responsibility for continuous care of the sick, the injured,
the disabled, and the dying. The nursing
profession is quite literally, the “super glue” which holds the healthcare system
together. Every aspect of medical care
depends upon collaboration with nurses. Nurses are among the hardest working
healthcare professionals and deserve our reverence and gratitude. Furthermore, nurses improve the health of
individuals, families, and their communities.
Senator
Walsh has exposed the fact that both federal and state legislators have become
overconfident in their ability to reform healthcare. In reality, it is an industry sector most
politicians know little about. In fact, Senator
Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) and Senator Cory Gardner (R-CO) recently introduced
legislation to limit the ability of doctors to prescribe opioid medications for
more than seven days --even when deemed medically necessary. The hubris of this
approach seems to be growing across the legislative branch while reasonable
concerns voiced by front-line health professionals are largely ignored.
Winston
Churchill said, “You can always count on the Americans to do the right thing
after they have tried everything else.” This sentiment echoes the tactics of lawmakers
more so today than at any other time in our history. Legislators--who have never attended nursing
or medical school and have no training or competency—repeatedly attempt to influence
healthcare policy without possessing an adequate knowledge base to know what is
best. At the same time, lawmakers appear
to prioritize the needs of special interest groups over implementation of real,
common-sense solutions.
We will all
be patients eventually. Our lives will
depend on the care provided by skilled and conscientious bedside nurses. We should hold our elected officials
accountable when they disparage the role of healthcare professionals in
delivering high quality healthcare to the patients they serve. But Senator Walsh is just a symptom of a
larger problem. There is no replacement
for the real-life experience and expertise that front-line health care
professionals can provide. To repair the
broken healthcare system, lawmakers should stop trash talking healthcare
professionals and focus on representing the needs of their constituents. Nurses save lives. Nurses are irreplaceable. And politicians would do well to remember
that.
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