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Safe Staffing in Skilled Nursing and Long Term Care Facilities By: Renea Clark, RN March 4, 2015 Western Washington University RN-BSN Program.

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Presentation on theme: "Safe Staffing in Skilled Nursing and Long Term Care Facilities By: Renea Clark, RN March 4, 2015 Western Washington University RN-BSN Program."— Presentation transcript:

1 Safe Staffing in Skilled Nursing and Long Term Care Facilities By: Renea Clark, RN March 4, 2015 Western Washington University RN-BSN Program

2 Current WA Law for SNF/LTC: Enough nursing and support staff to “maintain the highest practicable physical, mental and psychosocial well-being, self-care and independence in accordance with his or her comprehensive assessment and plan of care. ( WAC 388-97-1060)”

3 97% of SNFs are understaffed (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services)

4 Quality

5 Hospital Re-admissions 25% of pt’s discharged to SNF are re-admitted within 30 days Costing approximately $4,000,000,000.00 annually 78% are avoidable Urinary tract infections (UTI) Congestive heart failure complications Respiratory infection Sepsis Electrolyte imbalances

6 Benefit of Increased Nursing Care Increased minutes of direct nursing care saved $319,000.00 per 100 bed SNF overall. (Horn, 2008). By reducing UTI’s, Pressure ulcer formation, and hospitalization

7 High Staff Turn Over Rates Studies show that high patient loads increase staff turnover turnover rates in the LTC range from 55-75% The average cost of training a new employee is $2500. 00 (Tilden, Thompson, Gajewski, & Bott, 2012).

8 Why care… “Nurse staffing fits squarely in the realm of better care, better health, and lower costs. Nurse staffing is an evidence-based way to improve quality of care and prevent adverse events… which are costly (Weston, Brewer, & Paterson, 2012).”

9 Recommendation Increase nursing staff in LTC/SNF Change the law to reflect current acute care law Safe staffing committee for each facility made up of 50% direct care staff

10 References Horn, S. D. (2008). The Business Case for Nursing in Long-Term Care. Policy, Politics, & Nursing Practice, 9(2), 88–93. doi:10.1177/1527154408320420 Mor, V., Intrator, O., Feng, Z., & Grabowski, D. C. (2010). The Revolving Door Of Rehospitalization From Skilled Nursing Facilities. Health Affairs, 29(1), 57–64. doi:10.1377/hlthaff.2009.0629 Tilden, V., P., Thompson, S., A., Gajewski, B., J., & Bott, M., J. (2012). End-of-Life Care in Nursing Homes: The High Cost of Staff Turnover. Nursing Economic$, 30(3), 163–166. Weston, M., J., Brewer, K., C., & Peterson, C., A. (2012). ANA Principles: The Framework For Nurse Staffing to Positively Impact Outcomes. Nursing Economic$, 30(5), 247–252.


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