Patient Care at Eastern Maine Medical Center
Transcription
Patient Care at Eastern Maine Medical Center
Patient Care at Eastern Maine Medical Center … a nurse priority … a community concern A report by the Worker Rights Board of Eastern Maine on patient care and quality healthcare outcomes from the perspective of those who do the work. Page |1 Worker Rights Board of Eastern Maine 20 Ivers Street, Brewer, Maine 04412 ● (207) 989-5860 Steering Committee Dr. Bjorn Claeson Rev. Dr. Mark Doty Hon. Adam Goode Julie Grab Eric Mehnert, Esq. Bill Murphy Members Dr. Doug Allen Dr. Francois Amar Margaret Baillie Dr. Tony Brinkley Lisa Butler, Esq. Hon. Emily Cain Dr. Valerie Carter Dennis Chinoy The mission of the Worker Rights Board of Eastern Maine is to provide a community forum to legitimize workers' voices and to help remedy workplace injustices. Rev. Dr. Susan Davies John Diefenbacher-Krall Jon Falk Father Tom Farley Dr. Nathan Godfried Hon. Geoff Gratwick, M.D. For more information, please go to www.foodandmedicine.org/worker-rights-board or call 989-5860. Rev. Becky Gunn Dr. Mike Howard Rabbi Darah Lerner Clyde MacDonald Dr. Beth McKillen Hon. Mike Michaud Suzanne Moulton Joe Perry Ilze Petersons Hon. Elizabeth Schneider Paul Volckhausen Page |2 Patient Care at EMMC Table of Contents: Executive Summary 4 The Worker Rights Board of Eastern Maine (WRB) 5 Background to the Crisis 5 Preliminary Conclusions 8 Nurse and Patient Testimonials 10 Conclusion 20 Acknowledgements 23 Appendices: A: WRB invitation to Corporators 24 B: WRB Op Ed 26 C: WRB letter to Deborah Carey Johnson 28 D: Deborah Carey Johnson letter to WRB 29 E: Bangor Daily News coverage of Forum 30 F: Eastern Maine Healthcare Systems (EMHS) Directory 31 Page |3 Executive Summary The nurses and management at Eastern Maine Medical Center (EMMC), a non-profit community hospital, just settled the second contentious contract negotiation in two years. However, the issues of nurse staffing and patient care promise to remain critical issues in the times ahead. Further, severe budget cuts proposed by the LePage administration threaten funding to Maine’s regional healthcare providers. EMMC management recently announced the sale of its dialysis services to a for-profit, Fortune 500 dialysis company, Colorado-based DaVita, further raising concerns about the management of our community-directed, non-profit hospital. Most of EMMC’s revenue comes from tax dollars through Medicare, Medicaid, Mainecare and public insurance pools. EMMC also benefits from the forgiveness of income taxes and other corporate taxes, including property taxes. This is particularly significant for Bangor and Brewer, where property tax rates are relatively high. EMMC’s costs are also passed on to the public through health insurance premiums, which rise when healthcare costs go up. Given the situation, this report will Explore developments and issues underlying the factious relationship between EMMC management and its workers. Provide the perspectives of EMMC employees and former patients. Explore the roles and responsibilities of: Nurses and their unions. Management at our non-profit, community hospital. Corporators and board members of EMMC. Local elected leaders. The Worker Rights Board of Eastern Maine (WRB) sees these issues as absolutely essential to worker rights, the care of patients, and the long-term viability of the Eastern Maine Medical Center as a crucial asset to our community. The questions we attempt to answer in this report are: Have conditions for patient care improved at EMMC? To what degree does EMMC management look after the greater good? Has EMMC management become more forthcoming and accountable to our community? What can be done to help resolve worker-management issues at EMMC and to improve healthcare services for the local community? Page |4 Worker Rights Board of Eastern Maine In early 2009, members of the Bangor community, concerned about injustice in the workplace and the weakened voice of both organized and unorganized workers, began to put together a worker rights board. This board is a project of Food AND Medicine and Jobs with Justice. Since 1993, Jobs with Justice worker rights boards have brought together respected members of communities to address the lack of an adequate legal framework to listen to workers’ stories and to advocate for just solutions to violations of workers’ rights. As members of local boards in more than 25 cities and a National Workers’ Rights Board, religious leaders, academics and elected officials respond to worker and community concerns in a variety of public forums. In January 2010, the Worker Rights Board of Eastern Maine (WRB) introduced itself to the community. This board, made up of over 30 faith leaders, farmers, elected officials, legal and judicial representatives, academics and various members of non-profit groups, fulfills two essential functions: it provides a community forum to legitimize workers’ voices, and helps remedy workplace injustices. The WRB helps workers to make changes that will benefit their lives and the surrounding community. Worker rights boards use a variety of tactics, the most powerful being listening to workers in a formal “hearing.” In the fall of 2010, nurses who were negotiating their new contract with the Eastern Maine Medical Center (EMMC) felt their voices were not being heard. Through their union, the Maine State Nurses Association/National Nurses United (MSNA), they approached the WRB for assistance. Background to the Crisis How did we get to this point? One dark and rainy night in the autumn of 2010, State Street in Bangor was lit up with hundreds and hundreds of candles held by working professionals at Eastern Maine Medical Center (EMMC), who were calling attention to staffing issues and patient safety at their workplace. The National Institute of Health estimates that 98,000 patients die each year in US hospitals due to avoidable error and staff shortages. Registered nurses intercept 86% of all medication errors, but they must be present, on duty, with manageable loads and have time to utilize their skills in patient assessment in order to catch errors effectively. The nurses wanted the public to know that these issues are interrelated. A few weeks later—one week before Thanksgiving—EMMC administrators did what no other hospital in Maine has done before. They locked out over 800 nurses for two days after a one-day strike by the nurses’ union. The nurses reached out to the community to broaden the conversation about patient care. They met with legislators, non-profit institutions, and the Worker Rights Board of Eastern Maine. Page |5 Is this solely an issue between labor and management, or does it concern the entire community? The steering committee of the WRB met regularly to discuss the issues brought by the nurses, research the problems, and make contact with all parties involved. At the same time, the EMMC began a series of advertisements about the contract questions, bringing the staffing issue directly to the community. The WRB steering committee offered to meet with the EMMC administration both in person and by letter (See Appendix A), but were repeatedly rebuffed. Nurse staffing: a critical issue in our community After a number of meetings with nurses, the WRB steering committee realized that nurseto-patient staffing ratios affect nurses and are a concern to the entire community. Although there have been staffing concerns since the 1970’s regarding both nurse-to-patient ratios and schedules, this has become a larger issue since 2009, in part because EMMC has eliminated nearly 100 nursing positions. The Medical Center administration has insisted on leaving vacancies unfilled, despite nurse opposition. The loss of 10% of the work force has resulted in increased patient assignments for staff nurses, especially during the 7pm-11 pm period in the Towers (the main building at EMMC), where a second shift was virtually eliminated. Due to the critical role nurses play, patient care has suffered. As one nurse stated, “This isn’t about not wanting to work hard, it is about the simple impossibility of being two or more places at once.” The nurses were quite clear, inadequate staffing had reached a crisis point for patient care. EMMC response to nurses EMMC management either ignored or rejected nurse staffing as an issue for contract negotiations, and instead repeatedly attacked the union. EMMC hired a Portland law firm that specializes in union busting as a negotiator, spent well over $60,000 on newspaper advertisements disparaging nurses and their union, and spent more than $900,000 on salaries, meals, and travel for 215 replacement nurses for a lockout. The nurses believed management had little intention of negotiating in good faith. Even in its ads to the whole community, EMMC said it “cannot compromise with a national nurses union on staffing ratios, transfer language and health insurance offerings.” (See page 7) EMMC response to the WRB After initial investigation of the negotiation issues, the WRB steering committee invited EMMC management to meet with them. The management declined to meet with the steering committee, offering to talk only with Adam Goode, a state legislator and steering committee member. During the continued negotiations and mediation of their contract, nurses told the WRB steering committee that they felt an atmosphere of intimidation beginning to arise, in which nurses who questioned or challenged the EMMC were threatened by management. Page |6 Bangor Daily News 11/16/10 p B3 Page |7 Preliminary Conclusions By March 2011, after several meetings with nurses and union negotiators and an extensive investigation of the issues involved, the WRB came to several conclusions: 1. There needs to be far more transparency in hospital operations as they relate to patient care. Also, the hospital should publicly disclose staffing levels and rates of hospital acquired infections and medical errors. 2. EMMC Board of Directors meetings need to be open to the public. Further the Board of Directors should include members representing low and mid-level employees of the hospital and former patients. 3. The workload and stress caused by inadequate staffing and resulting job requirements are having a critical effect on the quality of care, which poses dangers to members of the community. 4. EMMC management’s reprisals against nurses who speak up for their rights and the climate of fear this causes must end. Therefore, the WRB declared the need for a public forum where positions in the contract negotiations could be heard and concerns could be voiced. The nurses, the EMMC management, and the public were all invited to participate in the forum, held on April 25, 2011. Nurse testimonials and patient testimonials follow. The EMMC management chose not to participate. Page |8 Bangor Daily News 2/9/11 p A3 Page |9 Nurse and Patient Testimonials The Worker Rights Board of Eastern Maine (WRB) hosted a forum at the Bangor Public Library on Monday, April 25th, 2011 entitled Staffing and Quality Healthcare Outcomes at Eastern Maine Medical Center. Prior to the forum, the WRB invited EMMC Board members, Corporators, nurses and the community to attend. Michelle Hood, EMHS President and CEO wrote ominously in e-mail to EMHS Corporators that, “a person who attends and expresses an opinion at odds with the union’s viewpoint should be prepared for the possibility of being treated disrespectfully.” (See page 13). The public hearing, which was widely reported by the local media, featured numerous testimonies by workers and patients who cared about improving patient care. Within three days, management at EMMC did in fact “compromise with a national nurses union on staffing ratios, transfer language and health insurance offerings,” and the nurses won a contract. Members of the Worker Rights Board of Eastern Maine listen to Nurses and community members speaking about health care at Eastern Maine Medical Center. P a g e | 10 Dawn Caron Caron has been a RN at EMMC for fourteen years. At present, she is a labor and delivery nurse on level 7 at EMMC. Because of staff needs in the Emergency Room (ER), she volunteered to float there when they are in crisis mode. Recently, she has been cross training to the ER department so that when she goes to the ER she can be of more use to them. “Being a nurse is as much a part of me as breathing,” she says. “The current situation surrounding negotiations pains me deeply and voting to strike was the hardest thing I have ever done professionally.” She said, “The ER feels like a disaster zone. I feel called to help ER staff.” Along with drug-related emergencies, psychiatric admissions, and trauma patients, Dawn noted, violence and rage find their way into the hospital. She is concerned for the safety of employees. She described an incident where a nurse was grabbed by a patient and her head was slammed against the wall. She said that on the way into the ER, she passed beds in the hallway with patients who still had not been seen. She has had to prepare trauma patients for the operating room, a task that she had not previously done for many years. She described another incident in which a patient who was actively bleeding in the waiting room had to receive initial treatment in full view of patients and visitors, including children. According to Caron, the ER has a patient load that requires more staff, but the administration keeps saying there is no problem. “EMMC has said we’ve blindly followed in step with a national agenda,” continued Caron. “Yes, in step but not blind. We should be able to have the same level of competent, compassionate and adequately staffed care for ourselves and loved ones whether we are in California or in Maine.” When asked about floating staff, she said that nurses sometimes asked to move but are not comfortable in the new sites, in part because they might not have the experience needed for care. “Being a patient advocate is our highest calling,” declared Caron. “I do not understand how the administration of EMMC can say there is no problem with staffing and refuse to negotiate on this matter.” P a g e | 11 P a g e | 12 Jessie Mellott addressing the Worker Rights Board Forum Jessie Mellott Although she has worked at EMMC for ten years, Mellott has only been a nurse there for one year. She works a 12-hour shift, which she said can stretch to 13 hours or occasionally longer. She said that her priority is to do what is needed medically, but it is not always possible. In addition, Mellott said, “There are a lot of tasks that are proven to help patients heal faster, but when I am assigned 7 or 8 or more patients in a 12-hour shift, those simple tasks don’t get done, like helping patients to eat, encouraging them to do deep breathing, talking and listening to them, helping them walk or sit up in a chair.” She said, “I want to work harder, I want to have the time to do more for my patients.” She said that people are even asked to work an extra four hours, making a 16-hour shift total, and that “a lot on [her] floor would go back to eights [eight hour shifts] in a second.” Additionally, proper break time presents an issue. She said, “I’ve been told we’re supposed to get two fifteens and a half hour. I usually get a chance to stuff some food in a couple times a day. You’re having a good day if you get a lunch break!” She misses a break “Every day. Every day.” Cindy Kekacs Cindy is an RN who works on the cardiac floor. She said, “I like my job. I honor the trust of patients and families who allow me and expect me to keep them safe, help them get well and to provide accurate and reliable information about their illness and treatment.” Kekacs said that when she started nursing, she would have 3 to 5 patients on an 8-hour shift. “I had time to talk to patients and listen to them,” she P a g e | 13 said. Circumstances have changed with 12-hour shifts. At night, she said, patients are “scattered in a big triangle…hard to get to through distance and keep an eye on them.” She mentioned this to the Charge Nurse, who simply said everybody has a heavy load. One night Kekacs said to a Charge Nurse, “Somebody’s going to fall tonight.” 90 minutes later, one patient fell. “I take responsibility very seriously. I felt I had let him down and more than just myself at fault,” Kekacs recalled from that night. “More than that, the system was at fault. I still had six patients, despite objections to the Charge Nurse. Fortunately, no broken bones, but that’s not the point. I don’t want to work in circumstances where when I finish a shift it’s ‘phew, nobody got hurt today.’ The thing now is fewer staff with more patients.” She agreed with Mellott about good things falling by the wayside. “I went into nursing to give patient care, not give pills. I don’t feel I have the time. Yes, it’s more stressful. I liked working under the old system.” Steven Akerley Steve is a thirty-year employee of EMMC, 20 of them as an RN. He is a steward and also works on the Professional Practice Committee. He said, “EMMC has grown, the economy is in the tank, health care is a mess, patients are sicker, and they require so much care. Support from the hospital is not there.” He said that nurses work long hours with little or no back up and on top of this must do hours of work on the computer. The committee gets letters from nurses who are mentally and physically tired and can’t give patients the care they deserve. He said that nurses are also patient advocates. “Let’s get Eastern Maine Medical Center back into the patient care business and out of the profit business.” Akerley said that “patients wait longer to come in” than they did in the past. “There are more patients with multiple morbidities, and it takes a lot of care,” Akerley continued. “We used to have a nursing pool and techs to back up. The system balanced out better.” When questioned about techs, he said that one floor technician could have fifteen patients. P a g e | 14 Rachel Maidlow Maidlow has been a nurse for 29 years at EMMC and is now in the ICU. She said that she has seen drastic changes in how nurses are used. “I came to make a difference in lives. I don’t feel I can do that anymore,” Maidlow said. She said there are two patients to one nurse in ICU, but there are patients who require more than one nurse. Maidlow feels that nurses are taking on larger loads to make up for the removal of adequate support staff. “The Charge Nurse may not be available for assistance..things happen; we no longer have a safety net to catch bad things,” she said. She explained how, due to staff shortages elsewhere in the hospital, every day there are patients waiting in the ICU to get moved to other floors. Lori Trundy Trundy testified on the problems of understaffing and long shifts. “We work 12-hour shifts and a lot of days we don’t get our fifteen-minute breaks,” she said. We just continue to work. A lot of times we don’t get our lunches, or we watch monitors during lunch or answering the phone. We’re just sort of used to it – we just do it. We’ve given the hospital suggestions about how to deal with this – like keeping the Charge Nurse without assignment. You need someone to help you.” Trundy continued, “We don’t want to be here to seem like complainers and we don’t want to be on the picket line, but we’ve given suggestions about how to do things and they’ve said they have no intention of meeting you anywhere on the continuum. How do we negotiate? We both have to be willing to bend on issues. We hope they are willing to consider our suggestions.” When asked whether she knew the labor laws regarding breaks, Trundy said “We have the right to take breaks – that’s mandated by law.” She noted that, too often, employees feel they must make reports anonymously. P a g e | 15 Eloise Rhyne Rhyne has been a nurse for 43 years and has worked for 23 years at EMMC. She works 12-hour shifts in the ICU, which she feels is too long. She said that it is good when nurses in the ICU are assigned one or two patients, but sometimes is they are assigned more and the Charge Nurse has assignments also. In the ICU, a patient might come in who is in desperate need of care, and there is no one to cover the load. She said that as the numbers of patients go up, if a nurse in the ICU “misses one little thing, the patient is critical within the hour.” Since nurses fight to help their patients, they also cover for each other when they have large loads. This means they often miss breaks, according to Rhyne. “We don’t get our breaks,” she said, “don’t get supper hours because it’s critical and we don’t want to leave one nurse with four patients.” When asked whether overtime is mandated, Rhyne said no, but explained that once she had been asked to work a sixteen-hour shift and go to another floor to pick up seven patients. Out of concern for patient safety, she said no, and the supervisor told her she is “ not a very good team player.” Emily Braley Braley has been at EMMC for 11 years, 10 of them as a nurse. She spoke about the issue of health insurance. According to Braley, EMMC wants to remove nurses’ options for insurance and provide only what she called “catastrophic” insurance, with a $10,000 deductible. When questioned about the change, the EMMC said they couldn’t afford other policies. Yet, said Braley, the hospital’s own website shows financial health. “Shouldn’t keeping employees healthy be a priority for the hospital?” she asked. Braley said that there could be no other justification for EMMC’s decision other than increasing profits. She also explained the differences between insurance offerings for union and nonunion employees. According to Braley, EMMC’s insurance offerings are a deliberate strategy to pit employees against each other to weaken the union. P a g e | 16 Alan Young Young is an ex-patient who has been hospitalized many times. He first described how patients are held in hallways because wards are kept empty due to understaffing. Therefore, beds are not available. Young said he even once had a heart attack in a hallway bed. His last hospital visit was for knee surgery and he needed help to get out of bed and use the bathroom. When he buzzed for help, no one came. After ringing the call button every five minutes for 45 minutes, he soiled the bed. “Is this quality patient care?” Young asked. He said, “Nurses are born with a special gift. The care they provide for patients who have to be in the hospital is so crucial to healing.” His major concern is that understaffing interferes with this role of nurses in care. Robert Toole Toole is an ex-patient who has lived in Bangor all of his life and whose wife has had four children at EMMC. Though some of his experiences at the hospital were good, Toole felt that more recent ones had been negative. On one recent occasion he went to the ER with severe back pain. He said, “They put me on a gurney and left me in the hallway. I have diabetes, my sugar was low, and I was in trouble.” Toole said that there were not enough care providers, and that he expects more from hospitals. “When you’re in the hospital, you expect to be cared for, not to get sicker. I thought I had been forgotten,” he said. Toole was also concerned that nurses are not used effectively. “Nurses are placed in other locations where skills are wasted,” he said. P a g e | 17 Joe Gallon Gallon was a patient early in 2011 at EMMC. Undergoing serious surgery and complications following surgery, he was treated by a number of nurses during numerous stays at the hospital. He felt the nurses were caring and very professional. Several events made him think, however, that the hospital was low on staff. For example, he described being “tied up on an IV pump constantly.” “Every time I turn around it starts to beep,” he continued. “Fifteen minutes, nobody shows up. I waited another fifteen minutes. Nobody shows up. I called in again, they said they were very busy but somebody will be down. Eventually someone came down.” Maureen Caristi Caristi is an R.N. who spoke from both the experience of working at EMMC and of being a patient there. She said that once she “was a patient, a very sick patient.” On this occasion, Caristi was moved from a floor to the ICU, then back to the other floor, after which she went into a respiratory arrest. Once again, she was moved to the ICU and had multiple problems, ending her visit with “open wounds, bed sores, and tendrils embedded in her leg...” Caristi said that safe staffing “should be a moral, ethical deal” and that she never thought she would get up and speak about it. “…it should be a legal thing,” Caristi continued. “They have to have safe staffing and better patient care.” Having once been a steward, she said, “I can tell you for a fact there is retribution from management when we speak out.” She talked about one instance when she saw a family who sat in the ER for two days. She said that a family member died the next day. “[EMMC] told the family there were no beds, but in truth there were, just nobody to take care of the patients,” said Caristi. Monica Rizzo Rizzo is an RN in northern California. She has been a med/surg nurse for nine years and is a union member. She said that the union supports her and cares for her as a person, and also works for patient safety. Rizzo works the night shift, 11pm-7:30 am. Although the state of California mandates ratios of 12-5 or less for the med/surg unit, her hospital gives nurses 1-2-4. Rizzo said that the management at her hospital realizes that nurses have to provide not only a healing environment, but also essential care and teaching. For example, nurses have to teach patients home care skills such as dressing changes and injections. Rizzo also said that RNs at her hospital have a break schedule that works. “I have a designated break relief that works with me, comes to me and says P a g e | 18 you have 15 minutes – go on break,” she said. “We have a telephone. I take my fifteen minutes to walk around, come back, and know my patients were cared for. Then I have my thirty minutes, again can have my rest period uninterrupted, and know my patients were cared for. Last fifteen minutes the same. I can go home and not feel guilty something has happened, praying something won’t come up.” When asked if a person was hired for break relief, Rizzo replied that yes, her hospital schedules an RN whose whole assignment is break relief. “We have six nurses plus her,” Rizzo said. “She provides seven hours worth of break in an 8-hour shift; that’s all they have time for.” Judy Brown Brown, who is president of MSNA Local #1, said she approaches this issue not only as a nurse and union leader, but also as a community member. “I’m very concerned that the hospital does not want to deal with nurses, the people who have dedicated their lives [to patient care],” said Brown. She said that the situation must improve. She described an incident when she once had time to sit and talk with a young male patient. He said he was very uncomfortable, because he “never knew when somebody could come in and relieve pain.” “After discussing his pain level and conferring with his doctor,” Brown continued, “we were able to reduce his pain from level seven to a two in about half an hour.” She was able to get him relief only because she had time to “sit with him and know what’s going on with medications.” Brown continued, “This is not an economic issue; it’s a moral issue.” She and the nurses did not want to go on strike. “We want to get this solved,” she explained. Cokie Giles Giles spoke more than once from the audience. As a member of the bargaining team, she spoke about the hospital’s response to staffing requests, and about a mandatory forum all nurses had to attend. Giles said that one nurse who spoke in criticism of the hospital got a written warning from the administration a week later. P a g e | 19 Conclusion The mission of the WRB is to provide a community forum to legitimize worker’s voices and to remedy workplace injustices in Eastern Maine. Our examination of the contract negotiations and working conditions within the EMMC show that there is much to be done to improve the largest hospital in Eastern Maine. After meetings with both sides, a full study of the issues and real conditions at EMMC and a public forum of testimonies, the WRB has come to a number of conclusions: a. Workload and stress caused by understaffing, shift schedules, and job requirements have had a critical negative effect on patient care at EMMC. From the ER to the ICU, understaffing has resulted in many negative conditions for both nurses and patients, including: i. facilities are not being fully utilized due to insufficient staffing, resulting in patients being held on beds in hallways in other areas or being held in highly monitored areas like the ICU long after they could have been transferred out to begin the transition toward recovery and exit from the hospital; ii. the nurse/patient ratio is so high that nurses need to rush just to give out medications on schedule and fulfill minimum nursing care requirements, and cannot give quality patient care or take time to talk to patients about their condition or view changes in patients’ symptoms; iii. the burden of job requirements and lack of backup causes nurses to sacrifice legally required breaks throughout their mandated 12-hour shifts, resulting in a higher chance of poor care or mistakes; iv. floating assignments place nurses in areas outside their expertise, which could threaten patient care; and v. stress caused by long shifts, understaffing, poor organization of facilities and assignments and efforts by management to question and divide staff are causing a lessening of the quality of patient care at EMMC. b. At times there is authoritarian and disrespectful supervision of nurses in the hospital and a fear of reprisal toward those who question policies. Many testimonies at the WRB’s forum describe a threatening attitude being expressed by supervisors when nurses questioned demands. For example, one nurse questioned working four hours overtime (on top of a 12-hour shift) and adding seven more patients. When, out of concern for patient safety and care, she refused, her supervisor simply looked down on her, saying she was “not a good team player.” When forced into these difficult situations, nurses have the right to sign an Assignment Despite Objection (ADO) form. However, one nurse told the WRB that she did this and was followed around by an administrator who made notes on a clipboard about her work, intimidating her. One nurse testified that if nurses make serious complaints to administrators, it is usually done anonymously. This is a very poor working climate, which will in turn affect patient care. In order to monitor and document situations in which nurses work shorthanded, the ADO forms should be encouraged rather than discouraged. P a g e | 20 c. Both on the job and during contract negotiations, nurses must be viewed with more respect, as professionals with experience and expertise in medical care. During bargaining and mediation, the hospital seemed to take an antagonistic ad hominem attitude. This was expressed by an almost immediate rejection of continuing direct negotiations and a number of costly advertisements in local newspapers. It was also expressed by a very expensive three-day lockout that clearly threatened patient care, due to replacement nurses who were unfamiliar with facilities and hospital policies. All nurses who gave testimonies or met with the WRB seemed to agree that they have not been viewed as experienced professionals worthy of respect. d. EMMC administration must be more transparent and accountable to the community. The public has a right to information from any institution that receives public money. Though the administrators certainly cannot answer each and every question from members of the community, they must not hide behind their website and newspaper ads. The nurses were denied information to which they had a legal right during negotiations, and were forced to file suit. The following are some questions that EMMC should answer to the community: i. ii. iii. iv. v. vi. vii. How much did the administration spend on the lockout / strike? What policies does EMMC have to encourage a supportive climate that embraces constructive criticism? Since the nurses at EMMC organized their union (the Maine State Nurses Association) in the 1970s, EMMC administration has consistently engaged in attacking and undermining the nurses union. What policies and mechanisms does EMMC have to ensure that its staff respect the union, the union’s elected officers and the processes of collective bargaining and contract maintenance? How has the patient census changed over the past two years and how have staffing numbers changed? Were EMMC Board member and EMHS Board members and Corporators involved in the decisions to lockout nurses, to spend money on replacement nurses and to spend money on extensive advertising? If so, how? What is the role of EMMC Board members and EMHS Board members and Corporators, and how are these individuals chosen? What is the relationship between EMHS’ non-profit and for-profit entities? What protections exist to ensure that neither entity is receiving funds improperly? At the EMMC, the ongoing problem involving the understaffing of nurses continues to have a severe and detrimental impact upon patient care, constructive labor relations with nurses and other support staff and the overall working environment of the institution. In the mid 1970's, the nurses of the EMMC first organized their union and worked collectively to address the issue of unsafe staffing levels and its harmful impact upon patient care. Since that time, the MSNA has continued to be a strong and dedicated advocate for safe staffing levels, manageable and humane shift schedules and fair job requirements. P a g e | 21 The management of the EMMC has both a moral and legal responsibility to work with the nurses of the MSNA on a continuous basis to resolve these issues. After all, it is the nurses of the MSNA who, through their experience, expertise and dedication, know best how to achieve and maintain quality care and safe staffing levels at the EMMC. P a g e | 22 Acknowledgements This report would not have been accomplished without the dedication and efforts of the many people. Special thanks are due to Julie Grab, who put extensive work into writing this report, and to Rep. Adam Goode and Rev. Mark Doty, who wrote a very thoughtful editorial in the Bangor Daily News on the issues at EMMC (included in Appendix B). Thanks to Eric Mehnert for moderating the Public Forum on April 25, 2011 that allowed for the testimony incorporated in the report, and to these WRB members for attending the forum: Valerie Carter, Doug Allen, Ilze Peterson, Beth McKillen, Bjorn Claeson, Margaret Baillie, Jon Falk, Julie Grab, Bill Murphy, Lisa Butler, Rep. Adam Goode, and Rev. Mark Doty. We also want to thank the Bangor Public Library for hosting the public forum. Thanks to Jack McKay, Vanessa Sylvester, Martin Chartrand, and Laura Binger, who provided staff and logistical support and helped those involved stay focused and direct their energy in an effective manner. Thanks to the individuals and organizations that fund Food AND Medicine. Thanks to the nurses and their union for having the wisdom, courage and strength to bring these difficult issues to the public, where they rightfully belong, and thereby aiding in making our hospital a better place. Finally, this whole effort would not have been achieved without the time, perseverance and wisdom of the WRB steering committee: Bjorn Claeson, Julie Grab, Bill Murphy, Rep. Adam Goode, Rev. Mark Doty, and Eric Mehnert. These individuals gave a huge amount of time to organizing support for nurses and patient care in a host of ways, including the public forum and this report. P a g e | 23 Appendix A: WRB Invitation to Corporators P a g e | 24 P a g e | 25 Appendix B: WRB Op-Ed P a g e | 26 P a g e | 27 Appendix C: WRB Letter to Deborah Carey Johnson P a g e | 28 Appendix D: Deborah Carey Johnson letter to WRB P a g e | 29 Appendix E: BDN Coverage of Forum P a g e | 30 Appendix F: Eastern Maine Health Systems Directory P a g e | 31 Forum on Eastern Maine Medical Center Staffing and Healthcare Quality Outcomes at the Bangor Public Library, April 25, 2011 P a g e | 32