Many Hospitals Are Not Ready for H1N1: Nurse Survey Shows Deficiencies in Hospital Swine Flu Readiness

A patient health and safety survey of 190 American hospitals from
coast to coast compiled by registered nurses in eight different states
finds that a disturbing number of our nation's healthcare facilities
are not prepared for the coming H1N1/swine flu pandemic, according to
results released today by the California Nurses Association/National
Nurses Organizing Committee.
The data reflects a survey conducted over the past four
weeks by RNs in hospitals in Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois,
Maine, Minnesota, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Texas.
What the RNs reported are wide gaps in safety gear,
infection control training, and post-exposure procedures. Among key
findings:
- At more than one-fourth of the hospitals,
nurses cite inadequate isolation of swine flu patients, increasing the
risk of infection to others.
- Nurses at 15 percent
of hospitals do not have access to the proper respirator masks,
exposing nurses and patients to infection; at up to 40 percent of the
hospitals, nurses are expected to re-use masks, in violation of Centers
for Disease Control Guidelines.
- At 18 percent of the hospitals, RNs report that nurses have become infected; one Sacramento, Calif. RN has already died.
CNA/NNOC
is calling on all hospitals to adhere to the highest standard of
protection for patients and nurses to combat the expected onslaught of
new cases this fall and winter, and urging legislators to strengthen
public protections.
"These continuing problems increase the risk that many
hospitals will become vectors for infection, with inadequate patient
protections leading to a spread of the pandemic among other patients,
their friends, family, and caregivers, and the surrounding community,"
warned Deborah Burger, RN, CNA/NNOC co-president. "What we're hearing
from around the country is dangerous to patient health and safety, but
with smart and clinically appropriate leadership we can fix policies in
time for the upcoming pandemic."
Among other findings:
- At 19 percent of the hospitals all or some
appropriate N95 respirator masks were not "fitted" to ensure their
effectiveness against the virus.
- More than one in five, 22 percent of the facilities, do not have enough masks, say nurses.
- Nurses
at fewer than half of facilities report that they have been adequately
trained on H1N1 issues, including identification of infected patients,
and procedures for caring for these patients.
To help combat these problems, CNA/NNOC called for:
- Minimize infection of hospital patients and
workers by strict adherence to the highest standard of infection
control procedures, including identification and isolation with
appropriate ventilation of infected patients.
- All
hospital workers and visitors must be provided with appropriate
protection gear at the highest government standards, including N95
respirator masks or better for all who enter the isolation room of a
confirmed or suspected H1N1 patient.
- Any RN who is unable
to work due to contracting a communicable or infectious disease
identified or treated in his or her hospital/clinic shall be guaranteed
sick leave, not face disciplinary action, and shall be presumptively
eligible for workers' compensation.
- Implement a
moratorium on any closures of emergency rooms, layoffs of direct
healthcare personnel, and reductions of hospital beds.
- Federal guidelines for protection must be developed that are consistent across agencies.
- Disposable
respirator masks must not be re-used. In the event of a demonstrated
national mask shortage, facilities should adhere to government
recommendations on mask conservation.
For more details, see www.CalNurses.org.