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This year marks the 15th anniversary of the implementation of nurse staffing ratios in California. Unsurprisingly, coordinated and cohesive labor interests are pushing to enhance the penalties for infractions and expand oversight for staffing ratio compliance.
Their claim is that increased penalties — an additional $30,000 for the first infraction (even with zero threat of patient harm) and $60,000 (again, with zero threat of patient harm) for subsequent infractions — will improve patient safety.
You all know better.
In truth, these efforts, manifesting in the form of Senate Bill 227 (Leyva, D-Chino), are little more than a blatant attempt to compel hospitals to hire more nurses, regardless of whether patients would be safer or overall quality would improve.
Let’s look at the facts: