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Shemansky blamed Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement
in part. "For some residents, it's around $100
day; divided by 24 hours, that's about $4.16,"
she said. "If this is someone who needs 24-hour
care, not necessarily [an] RN, you still can't hire
with those wages."
England said she is always looking for more RNs. "Whether
you're working in a hospital, nursing home or the private
sector, nurses are hard to come by," she said.
On average, nonprofit nursing homes have better staffing
ratios and look better in the federal ratings than their
for-profit cousins, said Charlene Harrington, Ph.D.,
RN, FAAN, a professor of sociology and nursing at the
University of California, San Francisco, who helped
create her state's far more detailed nursing home comparison
Web site.
"Nationwide, most of these proprietary homes cut
on the staffing to make money," she said.
Kitty Ashton, RN, has worked in long-term care-both
for-profit and non-for more than 20 years. She now works
as the staff development coordinator at the nonprofit
Cathedral Gerontology Center in Jacksonville, Fla. "With
a nonprofit home, your profit goes back mostly into
your facility," she said. "There are more
positions available."
In Ashton's work experience, that difference has played
out less in terms of quality of patient care and more
in terms of how hard nurses must work. "Instead
of doing one-and-a-half people's jobs, one person is
doing a job," she said.
Even at Beverly, which has a relatively generous 4.23
nursing staff hours per resident per day, one absent
nurse can create problems, Hatcher said. "Some
days you can be very organized and the day can still
go haywire," she said. "Basically, it comes
down to not having enough staff."
Hatcher estimates she spends half her time looking
in on her patients, assessing their condition and talking
with them. Many suffer from depression, either because
they don't like assisted living or they don't get many
visitors.
"Good nurses will spend time talking to them and
try to comfort them," she said.
Hatcher tries hard to give her patients a sense of
stability in the middle of what can be a jarring experience.
"When they have different nurses coming in and
out, it totally disrupts them," she said of the
patients. "They have to develop trust with you,
and once they do, they know that when they go to that
nurse and tell them something is wrong, the nurse is
going to take care of it."
The other half of her time, Hatcher spends reviewing
medicines, consulting with doctors and patients' families
and filling out paperwork.
Kim Shephard, RN, has watched the proliferation of
paperwork cut into the time a nurse would have to develop
relationships with patients. "The state has all
these guidelines and they are so picky," said Shephard,
a two-year employee of Beverly with 19 years' experience.
Hospitals, she said by way of comparison, can be much
more liberal, even in sensitive areas, such as the use
of restraints and sedatives.
Added to the indignities of lower pay and closer scrutiny,
many in the health care industry regard nursing home
jobs as easy. "When I injured my back in the '80s,
my aunt said, 'You should go to a nursing home, the
work is easier,' " Shephard said. "She didn't
know."
Nurses transferring from other settings often seem
surprised at the caseload of a nursing home nurse, many
in the field said. This in part accounts for the high
RN turnover rate at long-term care facilities, estimated
to be as high as 56 percent annually in a 2001 report
issued by the American Health Care Association.
Yet nurses like Ashton find themselves drawn back into
long-term care after working in new environments like
psychiatric wards and prison systems. Ashton said she
enjoys working with clients in a more holistic way-tending
to their spiritual, psychological and social needs-and
she also enjoys working closely with other medical professions,
like psychiatrists.
"You're not bored," she said. "There's
something different going on with somebody every day."
The job appeals to nurses who like the stability of
a long-term care population coupled with the variety
of issues that arise in elder care, she said.
The lure of the work is made stronger by the positive
working environment for Hatcher, who has worked at two
nursing homes run by Beverly Enterprises, which happens
to be the largest nursing home company in the country.
"We help each other a lot, especially if something
is going on with a patient or meds need to be out,"
she said. "That's why I won't leave."
Contact Heather World at H_world@yahoo.com
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