In America there is the ability to protest against an
employer if a group of employees feel that they are not being treated
correctly. We have a system of Unions and Labor Laws to protect the employees.
In recent years medical staff have jumped on the Union bandwagon, but the financial
realities are not compatible.
On
November 26, if negotiations between University of Chicago Medical Center
and the National Nurses Organizing Committee/National Nurses United are not
concluded the Nurses will strike. This strike will result in the closing of this Level 1 trauma
center for adult and pediatric patients:
“In preparation for the strike, UCMC announced earlier this week that it is moving about 50 babies and 20 children in its neonatal and pediatric intensive care units to other facilities.”
“Negotiations between UCMC and National Nurses Organizing Committee/National Nurses United began earlier this year. Medical center leaders say incentive pay — and whether the hospital should end the pay for newly hired nurses — is a sticking point in negotiations, according to the Chicago Tribune. The union has continued to express concerns about staffing levels.”
Usually strikes impact a business’s
finances because the workers make the widget that the business sells for
profit, thus without the widget the business does not make money. In this case,
however, Nurses are not money generators for medical facilities. Nursing Care
is a net loss for hospitals. In the Medical Field, only Providers generate
money. That is, the Doctors, Technicians, Therapists, etc. who provide a
medically necessary service or procedure to a patient, and for which they can then bill
the patient, usually through a Managed Care Organization, i.e. Insurance
Company. Through this billing, funds are generated to pay for the person who
performed the service or procedure. Funds are also generated to pay for the
equipment used in the procedure.
Nurses do remarkable work, but their
services are not billable for payment. Thus any salary paid to a nurse has to
come from monies generated by Providers. Thus a strike will not affect the
bottom line of a Hospital, it will only affect care that the Hospital can
provide.
“The nurses said they plan to strike unless an agreement is reached.”