How New Orleans Nurses Got Here
The health care landscape in the greater New Orleans area has two main entities – LCMC and Ochsner Health – prompting some nurses like Tatiana Mukhtar to call the situation a “health care duopoly,” according to Verite News.Â
“They’re making all the business decisions that put profits over patients in the New Orleans area,” she told Verite News in October 2023, prior to the unionization vote. “It’s time now for us to have a seat at the table and fight for our health care here to have a voice for us and for our patients.”Â
Dana Judkins, a registered nurse in UMC’s trauma intensive care unit, said in a news release that the union election occurred with a supermajority.Â
“Since the election, we’ve been talking to nurses about what our priorities are,” Judkins said, “and we’re ready to go to the table with a plan to win what we need for better patient care, better working conditions, and a better future for health care in New Orleans.”Â
Kisha Montes, an RN in UMC’s behavioral health unit, said in the NNU release that a strong contract would improve staffing, safety and patient care.Â
“We know that our first contract can set new, higher standards at UMC, and that can raise the bar at other hospitals, too,” she said. “So, we’re fighting for our patients and for ourselves, but we’re also fighting for patients everywhere and for all the nurses who haven’t unionized yet.”Â
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