Posts Tagged ‘patient handling’

One of the most dangerous jobs in America

Wednesday, February 11th, 2015

NPR featured the first in a series of reports on one of the most dangerous jobs in America, one that they say has more debilitating back injuries than the construction industry or law enforcement. In Hospitals Fail To Protect Nursing Staff From Becoming Patients, Daniel Zwerdling investigates the high rate of back injuries that plague the nursing profession, largely the result of poor patient lifting practices, which are greatly exacerbated by the obesity epidemic.

The impact of obesity cannot be overstated – nurses are required to lift or support morbidly obese patients as many as 15 to 20 times a day. NPR puts this in context, citing NIOSH manager James Collins: “… before studying back injuries among nursing employees, he focused on auto factory workers. His subjects were “93 percent men, heavily tattooed, macho workforce, Harley-Davidson rider type guys,” he says. “And they were prohibited from lifting over 35 pounds through the course of their work.”

Yet nursing employees in a typical hospital lift far heavier patients a dozen or more times every day. Tom Lynch discusses safe lifting limits in a prior post:

“… according to NIOSH the most a nurse or aide in the 90th percentile of strength should lift at any one time is 46 pounds. But a typical 8-hour workday in this field involves lifting about 1.8 tons. Twelve percent of registered nurses who quit the field report that they do so because of back pain due to patient handling.”

A Case in Point

Zwerdling talks to a number of nurses who discuss their injuries and how they happened. He focuses on the experiences of nurses at Kaiser Permanante in Walnut Creek, which he notes is no worse and perhaps better than many healthcare facilities. Although the hospital had dedicated lifting equipment and teams, there were not enough machines and not enough teams to staff them when needed. When patients need help, the need is often urgent and immediate.

Nurses who worked at Kaiser Permanante asked for a state investigation into lifting practices shortly after California’s 2012 Hospital Patient and Health Care Worker Injury Protection Act went into effect. In January 2014, a state Administrative Law Judge issued an order that declared that Kaiser had failed to have “specific procedures in place to ensure that sufficient staff was available to perform patient handling tasks safely.”

While this report is one that frames the issue in terms of nursing injuries, it’s also a safety issue for patients.

The American Nurses Association tracks legislation related to safe patient handling and mobility (SPHM). They note that:

“…eleven states have enacted “safe patient handling” laws or promulgated rules / regulations: California, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas, and Washington, with a resolution from Hawaii.

Of those, ten states require a comprehensive program in health care facilities (California, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Texas and Washington), in which there is established policy, guidelines for securing appropriate equipment and training, collection of data, and evaluation.”

Exacerbating Factors

In our prior post cited above, Tom talks about some additional factors contributing to the problem – the aging work force and nursing shortages.

“The average age of a registered nurse is now nearly 47. For Home Health Aides (HHA), it’s 46; for Certified Nursing Assistants (CNA), 39. Wages for the aides and assistants average between $11 and $12. Forty percent have been on food stamps and many get their own healthcare through Medicaid. (See: HHS Direct Care Workforce) The BLS (Bureau of Labor Statistics) estimates that the demand for HHAs between 2010 and 2020 will grow by 69%; CNAs, 40%. Collectively, we are confronted with a critical shortage of healthcare talent. According to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, “Direct care work is difficult, the wages are low and fringe benefits are often limited.”

It’s the same with registered nurses where, oftentimes, the shortage is self-inflicted. A study of 21 hospitals in the Twin Cities found that when registered nursing positions were decreased by 9%, work-related illnesses and injuries among nurses increased by 65% (Trinkoff, et al., 2005).”

Related Resources:

Prior Workers Comp Insider posts highlight other dangers involved in nursing:

Patient Handling: Another Big Log on the Healthcare Fire

Tuesday, November 26th, 2013

Muscular Skeletal (MS) injuries to nurses and nursing aides have become an epidemic in America. At least, according to the American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE) recent Safety Culture in Healthcare, The $13 Billion Case, a peer-reviewed feature in the October issue of Professional Safety, the Society’s journal .
The article’s author, Scott Harris, Ph. D., MSPH, says, “Pick any other industry, and the injury rate is less.” And he’s pretty much right.
Patient handling is the driver. According to NIOSH (National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health), the most a nurse or aide in the 90th percentile of strength should lift at any one time is 46 pounds. But a typical 8-hour workday in this field involves lifting about 1.8 tons. Twelve percent of registered nurses who quit the field report that they do so because of back pain due to patient handling.
This resonates with me. Lynch Ryan opened its doors in 1984. Our very first paying client was a community hospital, where patient handling injuries had caused the hospital’s experience modification factor to balloon to 2.77. Working with the nursing staff and Human Resources VP, we were able to introduce necessary management policies and procedures as well as a sophisticated modified duty program that cut workers comp losses by more than 80%. However, the muscular skeletal injuries kept happening, because patients kept having to be moved. So, the hospital bought two Hoya Lifts – yes, there were Hoya Lifts in 1984.
Getting staff to use the Hoya Lifts was an entirely different problem. It was actually harder than creating and systematizing the modified duty program, because using the lifts significantly increased the time it took to move the patient, and one thing nursing staff didn’t have a lot of, and still don’t, was time. Instituting the new patient handling protocols involved a lot of training. We had to create rules, procedures, metrics and accountability. Even so, it was incredibly difficult.
Over the year’s we’ve worked successfully for more than 120 hospitals, from tertiary care systems to single site community hospitals. But regardless of how much we’re able to help reduce workers comp loss costs, the patient handling problem never goes away.
Back to the Future
Now, nearly thirty years from that first engagement, the only thing that seems to have changed is that the problem has become more dire, turning into an industrial many-head Hydra.
The average age of a registered nurse is now nearly 47. For Home Health Aides (HHA), it’s 46; for Certified Nursing Assistants (CNA), 39. Wages for the aides and assistants average between $11 and $12. Forty percent have been on food stamps and many get their own healthcare through Medicaid. (See: HHS Direct Care Workforce) The BLS (Bureau of Labor Statistics) estimates that the demand for HHAs between 2010 and 2020 will grow by 69%; CNAs, 40%. Collectively, we are confronted with a critical shortage of healthcare talent. According to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, “Direct care work is difficult, the wages are low and fringe benefits are often limited.”
It’s the same with registered nurses where, oftentimes, the shortage is self-inflicted. A study of 21 hospitals in the Twin Cities found that when registered nursing positions were decreased by 9%, work-related illnesses and injuries among nurses increased by 65% (Trinkoff, et al., 2005).
Nonetheless, the BLS reports that between 2010 and 2020 the fastest growing occupation in America will be Registered Nursing (HHAs and CNAs follow close behind). The need is an additional 1.2 million nurses. In 2011 one out of every five new jobs created in America was in Healthcare. We should be graduating 30% more nurses than we are per year. But a shortage of nursing faculty prevents nursing schools from expanding to accommodate the demand. In 2011, nearly 76, 000 otherwise qualified candidates were turned away by nursing schools. This means that there will be fewer nurses and aides to go around at a time when hospital populations are growing much larger (both in numbers and size), meaning that the stresses involving patient handling will continue to intensify.
Patient handling injuries account for 53% of healthcare workers compensation loss costs. The mean average costs are five times higher for injured employees over the age of 45 than for those under the age of 25. Muscular skeletal losses per full time equivalent are well over $300, regardless of age.
I asked Rick Graham about this. Rick is Corporate Director, Insurance & Risk Control for Crozer Keystone Healthcare System in Delaware County, PA, and a Lynch Ryan client. Patient handling bedevils Crozer Keystone in general and Rick in particular. Crozer, like many hospital systems has been wrestling with the issue for decades. Through Rick’s efforts, the system has introduced a number of initiatives to deal with the issue, and, while many have proven somewhat successful, the problem remains. Rick now concludes that the only answer is to remove the people factor from the lift factor.
He also realizes that having lifting equipment built into every patient room is the only way to significantly increase patient handling protocol compliance. The system has done this in an acute care setting and has seen a significant decrease in injuries and costs. It’s the simplest solution, but the costliest. Trained lift teams could work (they’ve been shown to in one California hospital study dating from 1997), but lift team members get hurt, too, and they present logistical difficulties. Rick estimates that the ROI from installing the equipment is two years, but the budget issue is still daunting.
The bottom line is this: As Crozer Keystone is demonstrating, the healthcare industry, confronted with a tsunami of personnel, safety and workers comp issues, has got to begin – finally – to meet these challenges with the resources necessary to overcome them. Anything less will send healthcare in America to a far worse place than the rocky place it now inhabits.

NCCI study on safe lifting programs for long-term care facilities

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

A few years ago, an important NIOSH study on nursing home lifting equipment demonstrated that the benefits outweigh the costs. In addition to recapping the equipment investment in less than three years, NIOSH found a 61% reduction in resident-handling workers’ compensation injury rates; a 66% drop in lost workday rates; and a 38% decline in restricted workdays. Plus, the rate of post-intervention assaults during resident transfers dropped by 72%. That’s pretty impressive.
Now we have further evidence based on the recently-released study by NCCI: Safe Lifting Programs at Long-Term Care Facilities and Their Impact on Workers Compensation Costs (PDF). The study was a collaborative effort with the University of Maryland School of Medicine. It was limited to facilities that have had safe lift programs in place for more than three years. Originally, researches intended to compare the experience of facilities with and without such programs, but during the course of the research, the rate of adoption of safe lifting devices was so great that close to 95% of facilities had them and about 80% of those used them regularly.
NCCI summarizes the study results:

“After controlling for ownership structure and differences in workers compensation systems across states, the statistical analysis performed as part of this study shows that an increased emphasis on safe lift programs at long-term care facilities is associated with fewer workplace injuries and lower workers compensation costs. More precisely, higher values of the safe lift index are associated with lower values for both frequency and total costs. The safe lift index captures information on the policies, training, preferences, and barriers surrounding the use of powered mechanical lifts. The institution’s commitment to effectively implementing a safe lift program appears to be the key to success.”

One of the interesting aspects of the study is the safe lift index, referenced above, which was developed by researchers to aggregate answers from the survey questions into a single number. Researchers looked at several variables pertaining to policies and procedures. These included the training of certified nursing assistants in proper use of mechanized lifts, preferences of the Director of Nursing for powered mechanical lift use, potential barriers to the use of powered mechanical lifts, and enforcement of the lift policies. The report discusses these factors in greater detail, and demonstrate that there are many variables beyond just the equipment that affect overall program efficacy.
Many states have safe patient handling laws
In recent years, a number of states have enacted legislation mandating safe patient lifting – and that no doubt has contributed to the rapid adoption rate noted by NCCI researchers. According to the American Nursing Association, a strong advocate for such legislation, 9 states have implemented safe patient handling laws. These include Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas, and Washington, with a resolution from Hawaii. In addition, they are tracking states with pending legislation in 2001, currently 6 states: California, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Missouri and Vermont. You can also track this legislation via a map and you can access additional resources and information at ANA’s excellent Safe Patient Handling website.
Prior posts on safe lifting
Texas enacts safe lifting guidelines for a hazardous industry
Washington passes “Safe Patient Handling” legislation
NIOSH study on nursing home lifting equipment: benefits outweigh costs
Safe Lifting and Movement of Nursing Home Residents

Readers reply: Premium comparison and safe patient handling

Friday, April 21st, 2006

State Premium Ranking – Thanks to Mike Manley for pointing us to the 2004 Oregon Workers’ Compensation Premium Rate Ranking Summary, which offers a comparison of premium by state. Mike is the Research Coordinator at the Information Management Division of Oregon’s Department of Consumer and Business Services. He also points us to some other workers comp studies that look very valuable – thanks, Mike.
Safe patient handling – Ann Hudson, RN, BSN commented on our recent post about Washington passes “Safe Patient Handling” legislation, noting that: “Substantial savings could be realized by insurance carriers and employers, and the nurse shortage could be eased, if workers’ comp carriers assisted employers to retain back-injured nurses in other non-lifting nursing positions.”
Her comment led us to the Working Injured Nurses Group or WING USA, a site that provides information, advice, and support to injured nurses. Anne is a founder of this group as well as co-author of Back Injury Among Healthcare Workers: Causes, Solutions, and Impacts. She has been active in championing the cause of back-injured nurses – both in terms of prevention and also in advocating for reemployment of injured nurses in positions that don’t require lifting.
We appreciate informed comments from our readers. If you have resources, information, or just opinions, we encourage you to jump in!

Washington passes “Safe Patient Handling” legislation

Thursday, March 23rd, 2006

Few think of health care as one of the nation’s most hazardous professions, but there you have it: nurses, nursing home attendants, and other health care workers are among the nation’s most frequently injured work population, suffering from a high incidence of musculoskeletal injuries. Patient care calls for frequent lifting and moving, and this wreaks havoc with the back and shoulders. It’s estimated that as many as 12 to 18% of all nurses stop practicing due to chronic back pain. The nursing shortage means that many health care workers have to do more with less, increasing the likelihood of injury; ironically, these injuries may be a primary culprit in exacerbating the nursing shortage.
Not to mention the hazards to the patient. When you are at your most vulnerable, do you really want a single nurse to be heaving you about? Bill Cosby used to have a stand-up routine about how you never wanted to hear a doctor say “oops.” Similarly, When you are taking your first steps after major surgery, you don’t really want the nurse who is helping you to say “ouch” – a helper who is writhing in pain may not be in your best interests.
Legislators in Washington – prompted by the Washington State Nurses Association, United Food and Commercial Workers Local 141 and Service Employees International Union 1199NW – just passed a Safe Patient Handling law that requires hospitals to provide mechanical lift equipment for the safe lifting and movement of patients. According to Occupational Hazards:

“On a timeline between Feb. 1, 2007, and Jan. 30, 2010, Washington hospitals must take measures including implementation of a safe patient handling policy and acquisition of their choice of either one readily available lift per acute-care unit on the same floor, one lift for every 10 acute-care inpatient beds or lift equipment for use by specially trained lift teams.”

In August, we reported on Texas legislation that required nursing homes and hospitals to implement safe patient handling and movement programs. Most importantly, both laws have provisions that protect health care workers from reprisals should they refuse to perform patient handling that they deem potentially harmful to themselves or their patients.

Texas enacts safe lifting guidelines for a hazardous industry

Tuesday, June 28th, 2005

Quick – name the three leading industries with the overall greatest numbers of injuries and illnesses.
I’ve run this little pop quiz on people who work in the industry and those who don’t, and it’s rare that people get the right answers. According to Bureau of Labor Statistics, the dubious *winners* in the win, place, and show categories are laborers and material movers; heavy and tractor-trailer truck drivers; and nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants. (source)
For many people, this information is something like a game my nieces used to play called “one of these things is not like the other.” Many are startled to learn that our nation’s healthcare workers are right up there in the ranks of the nation’s most hazardous professions. The reason is largely due to patient handling that takes a heavy toll in back and neck injuries. An article in ErgoWeb describes some of the hazards for nursing home staff.
“In “Ergonomics: Guidelines for Nursing Homes,” OSHA identifies work-related musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) that include low back pain, sciatica, rotator cuff injuries, epicondylitis and carpal tunnel syndrome. It isn’t difficult to pinpoint why MSDs are such a problem. Nursing home employees care for residents who are disabled by frailty, stroke, fractures, Alzheimer’s disease and other conditions. The work involves heavy lifting, often in confined and awkward spaces.
Some good news from Texas
From Jordan Barab’s Confined Space, we learn that Texas has taken legislative steps to protect healthcare worker safety. The state is the first to enact legislation (TX SB 1525) requiring hospitals and nursing homes to implement a safe patient handling and movement program. The legislation takes effect on January 1, 2006. In his post, Jordan notes:
Most significantly, the law requires the plan to include “procedures for nurses to refuse to perform or be involved in patient handling or movement that the nurse believes in good faith will expose a patient or a nurse to an unacceptable risk of injury.”
This is good news for healthcare workers and hopefully other states will follow suit since OSHA has issued only ergonomic guidelines which, although good for what they are, many feel are meaningless in terms of affording workers any protection.