Nurses
concerned over staff levels
Three-quarters
of hospital wards in England are operating with unsafe staffing
levels at least once a month, a survey of nursing managers says
today.
21
April, 2013
The
Government has so far resisted calls to introduce mandatory staff
ratios for hospitals in the wake of the Mid Staffordshire scandal
arguing that it would not necessarily improve patient care and could
lead to organisations seeking to achieve staffing levels only at the
minimum level.
But
the poll of nurse managers by the Royal College of Nursing found that
NHS hospitals are regularly operating at levels that could be
potentially unsafe.
Of
the 2000 nurses in charge of hospital wards and team leaders working
in the community almost three quarters 74 per cent said staffing
levels dropped to unsafe levels at least once a month.
More
than a third (36 per cent) reported staffing levels were unsafe on a
weekly basis, while almost one in ten said staff numbers fell to an
unsafe level on every single shift.
In
his report into the failings of care at Mid Staffordshire NHS
Foundation Trust, inquiry chairman Robert Francis QC said officials
should consider the “benefits and value for money of possible
staff-patient ratios”.
At
the start of their annual conference in Liverpool the nursing union
said nine in 10 of their members said they would support the
introduction of mandatory staffing levels to protect patient safety.
“Without
a doubt understaffing is the single biggest challenge facing the NHS
today,” said Dr Peter Carter, general secretary of the RCN.
“Mandatory
staffing levels are proven to reduce patient mortality. With correct
management, flexibility and transparency there is no reason that
introducing mandatory staffing levels will become a "race to the
bottom" as some have described it. It is no less than patients
deserve.
“The
introduction of mandatory safe staffing levels, enshrined in law is
now a matter of extreme urgency.”
He
said it was important that the Government listened to ward sisters
who would be would be crucial in driving improvements in care.
“The
concerns of ward sisters are very clear: they do not have enough
staff to always provide the high level of care they know all patients
deserve; all too often they are not even being allowed to use their
experience to safeguard basic patient care.”
Jamie
Reed, Labour's Shadow Health Minister, called on the Government to
accept Francis’ recommendation.
“Robert
Francis was right to recommend benchmarks on staffing and the
Government should accept it without delay,” he said. “Ministers
must stop the job losses and ensure all hospitals have enough staff
to provide safe care.”
However
a Department of Health spokesperson said there was “no excuse for
hospitals that don't have enough staff on the wards” but that
mandatory staffing levels were not the answer.
“Hospitals
need the freedom and flexibility to decide on how many staff to
employ, because they know the care their patients need,” they said
"The
Francis Inquiry highlighted the need for better tools for hospitals
to decide on the right numbers of staff - we are working with NICE,
the CQC and NHS England to develop these. NHS England's Chief Nursing
Officer has also said hospitals should publish their staffing levels
- and justify them - at least twice a year.”
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