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February 18, 2010

Oppose Mandatory Nurse Staffing Ratios

HB5033 to be Heard in House Human Services Committee

A mandatory nurse staffing ratio bill, House Bill 5033, which is nearly identical to ratio bills that have been introduced over the past several years, will be heard in the House Human Services Committee. The bill’s sponsor is Representative Mary Flowers (D-31, Chicago). It is important to note that this particular committee and all but one of its members have NOT been involved in past hearings and discussions on this issue, so it is even more critical that they hear from hospitals.

ACTION REQUESTED: Please call, visit, fax or email your Representative, especially if she/he is a member of the House Human Services Committee. Let your representative know that mandatory nurse staffing ratios would be harmful to your hospital and to patients and would not be a workable approach, and ask him/her to OPPOSE HB5033. Share with your representative the positive impact your hospital’s implementation of the Nurse Staffing by Patient Acuity Act has made and emphasize that Staffing by Acuity is the right approach. To send an email to your representative, click here.

The list of members of the House Human Services Committee (and their contact information) can be seen below.

Ratios proposed in HB5033 are:

  • 1:1 in OR and trauma emergency units;
  • 1:2 in critical care units, including emergency critical care, intensive care, labor and delivery and post-anesthesia units;
  • 1:3 in antepartum, emergency room, pediatrics, step-down, and telemetry units;
  • 1:4 in intermediate care nursery, specialty care, medical or surgical units, and acute care psychiatric units;
  • 1:5 in rehabilitation units;
  • 1:6 in postpartum (3 couplets) and well-baby units.
  • HB5033 also would allow IDPH to prescribe even more stringent ratios in the future.

    To see the text of HB5033, click here.

    Suggested talking points on HB5033:

  • Please oppose House Bill 5033, and please urge your colleagues on the House Human Services Committee to oppose HB5033.
  • Hospitals are engaged in many efforts to provide an excellent workplace environment and rewarding career opportunities for nurses.
  • Over the past several years, the hospital community has worked with the General Assembly to support the enactment of several key landmark laws to enhance nurses' work environment, increase the nurse supply and promote patient safety. These laws include the Hospital Report Card Act, a prohibition on the use of mandated overtime, the Adverse Health Care Event Reporting Law, the establishment of the Illinois Center for Nursing, and most recently, the Nurse Staffing by Patient Acuity Law.
  • The Nursing Staffing by Patient Acuity Law assures that direct care nurses have a significant voice in the nurse staffing process; aligns staffing considerations based on the specific, unique needs of each patient and nursing resources; reinforces an evidence-based approach to nurse staffing; and recognizes the diverse staffing needs based on patients needing care in a wide range of health care settings – from smaller, critical access hospitals to large academic medical centers, and all points in between.
  • Prescribing arbitrary and rigid one-size-fits-all formulas for nurse staffing across all shifts and units are inappropriate and inefficient.
  • Nurse staffing ratios, as proposed under HB5033, incorrectly presume that all patients are alike, that all nursing units and nursing skills mixes are equal, and that all hospitals are the same. For example, patients in a medical-surgical unit in a rural setting do not present the same needs as patients in an academic medical center located in an urban area.
  • Illinois’ 200 hospitals specifically tailor their staffing plans to meet the dynamic and unique needs of patients in each of their communities.
  • California’s experience with its nurse staffing law has been horrendous: patient care delays in emergency departments, surgery and other critical services; and, compliance costs are estimated at more than $1 million per hospital, with 23 percent of those additional costs due to an increase in nurse wages (demand greatly exceeds the supply of available nurses). HB5033 would impose ratios even more stringent than California’s law.
  • Please oppose HB5033 and urge your colleagues on the House Human Services Committee to oppose this bill.
  • If you have any questions about HB5033, please call Cathy Grossi at 630-276-5706 or cgrossi@ihastaff.org or Nichole Magalis at 217-541-1162 or nmagalis@ihastaff.org.

    House Human Services Committee Members (HHSV)

    Representative District Phone/Fax Spfld. Phone/Fax
    Rep. Patti Bellock-R (Minority Spokesperson) 630-852-8633 / 630-852-6530 217-782-1448 / 217-782-2289
    Rep. Sandy Cole-R 847-543-0062 / 847-543-8862 217-782-7320 / 217-782-5257
    Rep. Annazette Collins-D 773-533-0010 / 773-533-1971 217-782-8077 / 217-557-7643
    Rep. Constance Howard-D 773-783-8800 / 773-783-8773 217-782-6476 / 217-782-0952
    Rep. Naomi Jakobsson-D (Chair) 217-373-5000 / 217-373-8679 217-558-1009 / 217-557-7680
    Rep. Tim Schmitz-R 630-845-9590 / 630-845-9592 217-782-5457 / 217-782-1138