No National Consensus
California was the first state to establish minimum nurse-to-patient ratios, doing so in 1999. More than two decades later, a federally mandated nurse staffing ratio has yet to be realized.
Sen. Sherrod Brown and Rep. Jan Schakowsky, both from Ohio, reintroduced the Nursing Staffing Standards for Hospital Patient Safety and Quality Care Act in March 2023, but it has seen little movement.
If approved, it would require hospitals:
- To implement and submit staffing plans to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
- Post a notice about their staffing ratios in each unit and maintain records of actual staffing ratios.
- Follow procedures to determine their staffing ratios.
Under the measure, nurses would be allowed to “object to, or refuse to participate in, an assignment” if it violates staffing ratios or if they aren’t qualified to take on the assignment. Hospitals that retaliate or discriminate against a nurse for objecting to an assignment could face civil monetary penalties from HHS.
Advocacy groups like National Nurses United have endorsed the legislation.
“The bill’s introduction is a direct response to the escalating staffing crisis in hospitals across the country,” NNU President Deborah Burger, RN, said at a press conference. “Tens of thousands of nurses have spoken out, marched, and struck for safer patient care conditions over the last year, sounding a clarion call for action. Nurses know the quality of our health care system is on the line and depends on the passage of this bill.”
The American Nurses Association (ANA) also threw its name behind the bill, stating that combining policy with “other nurse-led staffing standards and solutions” will improve working environments and patient outcomes.
![Hospital nurse staffing](https://william.nursingcecentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Hospital-nurse-staffing-2.png)