
Safety in Numbers
Nurse-to-Patient Ratios and the Future of Health Care
ILR Press
Published on 15. May 2012
288 pages
978-0-8014-6501-7 (ISBN)
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Description
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Legally mandated nurse-to-patient ratios are one of the most controversial topics in health care today. Ratio advocates believe that minimum staffing levels are essential for quality care, better working conditions, and higher rates of RN recruitment and retention that would alleviate the current global nursing shortage. Opponents claim that ratios will unfairly burden hospital budgets, while reducing management flexibility in addressing patient needs.
Safety in Numbers is the first book to examine the arguments for and against ratios. Utilizing survey data, interviews, and other original research, Suzanne Gordon, John Buchanan, and Tanya Bretherton weigh the cost, benefits, and effectiveness of ratios in California and the state of Victoria in Australia, the two places where RN staffing levels have been mandated the longest. They show how hospital cost cutting and layoffs in the 1990s created larger workloads and deteriorating conditions for both nurses and their patients-leading nursing organizations to embrace staffing level regulation. The authors provide an in-depth account of the difficult but ultimately successful campaigns waged by nurses and their allies to win mandated ratios. Safety in Numbers then reports on how nurses, hospital administrators, and health care policymakers handled ratio implementation.
With at least fourteen states in the United States and several other countries now considering staffing level regulation, this balanced assessment of the impact of ratios on patient outcomes and RN job performance and satisfaction could not be timelier. The authors' history and analysis of the nurse-to-patient ratios debate will be welcomed as an invaluable guide for patient advocates, nurses, health care managers, public officials, and anyone else concerned about the quality of patient care in the United States and the world.
Safety in Numbers is the first book to examine the arguments for and against ratios. Utilizing survey data, interviews, and other original research, Suzanne Gordon, John Buchanan, and Tanya Bretherton weigh the cost, benefits, and effectiveness of ratios in California and the state of Victoria in Australia, the two places where RN staffing levels have been mandated the longest. They show how hospital cost cutting and layoffs in the 1990s created larger workloads and deteriorating conditions for both nurses and their patients-leading nursing organizations to embrace staffing level regulation. The authors provide an in-depth account of the difficult but ultimately successful campaigns waged by nurses and their allies to win mandated ratios. Safety in Numbers then reports on how nurses, hospital administrators, and health care policymakers handled ratio implementation.
With at least fourteen states in the United States and several other countries now considering staffing level regulation, this balanced assessment of the impact of ratios on patient outcomes and RN job performance and satisfaction could not be timelier. The authors' history and analysis of the nurse-to-patient ratios debate will be welcomed as an invaluable guide for patient advocates, nurses, health care managers, public officials, and anyone else concerned about the quality of patient care in the United States and the world.
Reviews / Votes
Very timely. The authors offer a thorough review of nurse-patient ratios, looking specifically at California and Victoria, Australia (both are places that have mandated low nurse-to-patient ratios)... showing how nurses, hospital administrators, and health care policy makers have embraced and implemented low, safe ratios. It is crucial reading for health care professionals and administrators, upper-level undergraduates and graduate students, researchers, and general readers-anyone who is a patient, may someday be a patient, or knows a patient.(Choice)
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
Cornell University Press
Product notice
Reflowable
Illustrations
2 tables - 2 Tables, unspecified
ISBN-13
978-0-8014-6501-7 (9780801465017)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Suzanne Gordon | John Buchanan | Tanya Bretherton
Safety in Numbers
Nurse-to-Patient Ratios and the Future of Health Care
Book
04/2008
ILR Press
€32.18
Shipment within 10-20 days
Persons
Suzanne Gordon is an award-winning journalist. She is Visiting Professor at the University of Maryland School of Nursing and Assistant Adjunct Professor at the University of California, San Francisco, School of Nursing. She is the author of Life Support and Nursing against the Odds, the coauthor of From Silence to Voice, and the coeditor of The Complexities of Care, all from Cornell. John Buchanan is Director of the Workplace Research Centre at the University of Sydney. He is the coauthor of Fragmented Futures. Tanya Bretherton is a senior research fellow at the Workplace Research Centre, University of Sydney, and editor of Human Resource in Practice.
Content
<pre>
Contents
Acknowledgments 00
Introduction 00
Part I. California: Managed Care, Hospital Restructuring,
and the Ratio Response
Chapter 1. Hospital Restructuring and the Erosion of
Nursing Care in California and the United States 00
Chapter 2. Not Out of Thin Air 00
Chapter 3. The Hospital Industry Response 00
Chapter 4. Ratios Redux 00
Part II. Australia: Nurses and Work Intensification in Public Hospitals in
VictoriaContext, Response, and Legacies
Chapter 5. Working Life for Nurses in the Late 1990s in Australia: A Snapshot 00
Chapter 6. How Did It Come to This? The Factors Driving the Intensification of Nursing Work
00
Chapter 7. Winning Ratios in Victoria 00
Chapter 8. Evaluating the Impact of Ratios: An Imperfect Experiment 00
Part III. Arguments and Alternatives
Chapter 9. What We Know about Nurse Staffing 00
Chapter 10. Arguments against and Alternatives to Ratios 00
Conclusion: Ratios and Beyond 00
Appendix: Decision of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission on Nurse-to-Patient
Ratios 00
Notes 00
Index 00
</pre>
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