STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
3374
2019-2020 Regular Sessions
IN ASSEMBLY
January 29, 2019
___________
Introduced by M. of A. BICHOTTE, ORTIZ, JAFFEE, COLTON, RICHARDSON,
WILLIAMS, THIELE -- Multi-Sponsored by -- M. of A. COOK, DE LA ROSA,
D'URSO, ENGLEBRIGHT, HYNDMAN, SIMON, WRIGHT -- read once and referred
to the Committee on Health
AN ACT to amend the public health law, in relation to establishing the
"safe staffing for hospital care act"
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. Short title. This act shall be known as the "safe staffing
2 for hospital care act".
3 § 2. Legislative findings and intent. The legislature hereby finds and
4 declares that the state has a substantial interest in assuring that
5 delivery of healthcare services to patients in healthcare facilities
6 located within this state is adequate and safe and that healthcare
7 facilities retain sufficient nursing staff so as to promote optimal
8 healthcare outcomes. Recent changes in our healthcare delivery system
9 are resulting in a higher acuity level among patients in healthcare
10 facilities. Inadequate hospital staffing results in dangerous medical
11 errors and patient infections. Inadequate and poorly monitored nurse
12 staffing practices can adversely impact the health of patients who enter
13 hospitals and outpatient emergency and surgical centers. A substantial
14 number of nurses indicate that hospital-patient acuity measurements are
15 inadequate and that many hospitals rarely, if ever, staff according to
16 an acuity measurement tool. Hospital nurses work substantial overtime
17 hours and nurses working twelve-hour shifts work the most additional
18 overtime hours per week. Mandatory overtime and lengthy work hours for
19 direct-care nurses constitute a threat to the health and safety of
20 patients, adversely impact the general well-being of nurses and result
21 in greater turnover, which increases long-term shortage of nursing
22 personnel. Establishing staffing standards will ensure that healthcare
23 facilities throughout the state operate in a manner that guarantees the
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[ ] is old law to be omitted.
LBD00408-01-9
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1 public safety and the delivery of quality healthcare services. The
2 intent of this act is to protect the health and safety of the residents
3 of New York state by ensuring adequate protection and care for patients
4 in healthcare facilities.
5 § 3. The public health law is amended by adding a new article 28-F to
6 read as follows:
7 ARTICLE 28-F
8 SAFE STAFFING FOR HOSPITAL CARE
9 Section 2899-aa. Facility staffing standard.
10 2899-bb. Compliance with plan and recordkeeping.
11 2899-cc. Mandatory overtime and excessive duty hours.
12 2899-dd. Employee rights.
13 2899-ee. Enforcement.
14 § 2899-aa. Facility staffing standard. 1. Each facility licensed
15 pursuant to this article shall ensure that it is staffed in a manner
16 that provides sufficient, appropriately qualified nursing staff of each
17 classification in each department or unit within the facility in order
18 to meet the individualized care needs of patients.
19 2. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, as a condition of licens-
20 ing, each healthcare facility licensed within the state shall annually
21 submit to the department a documented staffing plan together with a
22 written certification that the staffing plan is sufficient to provide
23 adequate and appropriate delivery of healthcare services to patients for
24 the ensuing year. The staffing plan must:
25 (a) Meet the minimum requirements established in subdivision three of
26 this section.
27 (b) Be adequate to meet any additional requirements provided by other
28 laws or regulations.
29 (c) Employ and identify an approved acuity system for addressing fluc-
30 tuations in actual patient acuity levels and nursing care requirements
31 requiring increased staffing levels above the minimums set forth in the
32 plan.
33 (d) Factor in other unit or department work, such as discharges,
34 transfers and admissions, and administrative and support tasks, that is
35 expected to be done by direct-care nurses in addition to direct nursing
36 care.
37 (e) Identify the assessment tool used to validate the acuity system
38 relied on in the plan.
39 (f) Identify the system that will be used to document actual staffing
40 on a daily basis within each department or unit.
41 (g) Include a written assessment of the accuracy of the prior year's
42 staffing plan in light of actual staffing needs.
43 (h) Identify each nurse staff classification referenced therein
44 together with a statement setting forth minimum qualifications for each
45 such classification.
46 (i) Be developed in consultation with the direct-care nursing staff
47 within each department or unit or, where such staff is represented, with
48 the applicable recognized or certified collective bargaining represen-
49 tative or representatives of the direct-care nursing staff.
50 3. The healthcare facility's staffing plan must incorporate, at a
51 minimum, the following direct-care nurse-to-patient ratios: pediatric
52 recovery room--one to one, operating room circulating nurse--one to one,
53 special procedures (e.g. cath lab, radiology, endoscopy)--one to one,
54 trauma--one to one, burn unit--one to two, critical care--one to two,
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1 labor and delivery--one to two, adult recovery room--one to two, emer-
2 gency room--one to three, oncology/chemotherapy--one to three, interme-
3 diate care unit--one to three, telemetry--one to three, mother/baby
4 couplets and normal post-partum--one to four, pediatrics--one to four,
5 psychiatric unit--one to four, adult medical-surgical unit--one to six.
6 4. The department shall adopt regulations that establish minimum,
7 specific, numerical direct-care nurse-to-patient ratios for other
8 healthcare facility nursing departments and units that must be incorpo-
9 rated into the staffing plan.
10 5. The minimum numbers of direct-care nurse-to-patient staff set forth
11 in this section shall constitute the minimum numbers of direct-care
12 nursing staff that shall be assigned to and be present within a nursing
13 department or unit. Where the approved acuity system adopted by the
14 facility indicates that additional staff is required, the healthcare
15 facility must staff at the higher staffing level.
16 6. The skill mix reflected in a staffing plan must assure that all of
17 the following elements of the nursing process are performed in the plan-
18 ning and delivery of care for each patient:
19 (a) Assessment, nursing diagnosis, planning, intervention, evaluation
20 and patient advocacy.
21 (b) Registered nurses must constitute at least fifty percent of the
22 direct-care nurses included in the staffing plan.
23 (c) The skill mix may not incorporate or assume that nursing care
24 functions required by licensing law or regulations or accepted standards
25 of practice to be performed by a licensed nurse are to be performed by
26 unlicensed personnel.
27 7. The department shall adopt regulations prescribing the method by
28 which it will approve a healthcare facility's acuity system. Such regu-
29 lations may include a system for class approval of acuity systems.
30 § 2899-bb. Compliance with plan and recordkeeping. 1. Notwithstanding
31 any law to the contrary, as a condition of licensing, a healthcare
32 facility licensed within the state must at all times staff in accordance
33 with its staffing plan and the staffing standards established pursuant
34 to this article, provided, however, that nothing herein shall be deemed
35 to preclude a healthcare facility from implementing higher direct-care
36 nurse-to-patient staffing levels.
37 2. No nurse shall be assigned, or included in the count of assigned
38 nursing staff for purposes of compliance with minimum staffing require-
39 ments, in a nursing department or unit or a clinical area within the
40 healthcare facility without appropriate licensing, prior orientation,
41 and verification that the nurse is capable of providing competent nurs-
42 ing care to the patients therein.
43 3. As a condition of licensure, each healthcare facility licensed
44 pursuant to this article shall maintain accurate daily records showing:
45 (a) The number of patients admitted, released and present in each
46 nursing department or unit within the facility.
47 (b) The individual acuity level of each patient present in each nurs-
48 ing department or unit within the facility.
49 (c) The identity and duty hours of each direct-care nurse in each
50 nursing department or unit within the facility.
51 4. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, as a condition of licen-
52 sure, each healthcare facility licensed within the state shall maintain
53 daily statistics, by nursing department and unit, of mortality, morbidi-
54 ty, infection, accident, injury and medical errors.
55 5. All records required to be kept pursuant to this section shall be
56 maintained for a period of seven years.
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1 6. All records required to be kept pursuant to this section shall be
2 made available upon request to the department and to the public,
3 provided, however, that information released to the public shall not
4 contain the name or other personal identifying information, apart from
5 acuity level, about any individual patient.
6 § 2899-cc. Mandatory overtime and excessive duty hours. 1. Except
7 during a state of emergency declared by the governor, a healthcare
8 facility may not mandate or otherwise require, directly or indirectly, a
9 healthcare employee to work or be in on-duty status in excess of any one
10 of the following:
11 (a) The scheduled work shift or duty period.
12 (b) Twelve hours in a twenty-four-hour period.
13 (c) Eighty hours in a consecutive fourteen-day period.
14 "Mandate" for the purposes of this subdivision means any request
15 which, if refused or declined by the healthcare employee, may result in
16 discharge, discipline, loss of promotion, or other adverse employment
17 consequence. Nothing in this section is intended to prohibit a health-
18 care employee from voluntarily working overtime.
19 2. Except during a state of emergency declared by the governor:
20 (a) No healthcare employee may work or be in on-duty status more than
21 sixteen hours in any twenty-four-hour period.
22 (b) Any healthcare employee working sixteen hours in any twenty-four-
23 hour period must have at least eight consecutive hours off duty before
24 being required to return to duty.
25 (c) No healthcare employee may be required to work or be on-duty more
26 than seven consecutive days without at least one consecutive twenty-
27 four-hour period off duty within that time.
28 3. A work shift schedule or overtime program established pursuant to a
29 collective bargaining agreement negotiated on behalf of the healthcare
30 employees by a bona fide labor organization may provide for mandatory
31 on-duty hours in excess of that permitted under this section, provided
32 adequate measures are included in the agreement to ensure against exces-
33 sive fatigue on the part of the affected employees.
34 § 2899-dd. Employee rights. 1. Notwithstanding any law to the contra-
35 ry, as a condition of licensure, each healthcare facility licensed with-
36 in the state shall adopt and disseminate to direct-care nursing staff a
37 written policy that complies with the requirements set forth in subdivi-
38 sions two and three of this section, detailing the circumstances under
39 which a direct-care nurse may refuse a work assignment.
40 2. At a minimum, the work assignment policy shall permit a direct-care
41 nurse to refuse an assignment for which:
42 (a) The nurse is not prepared by education, training or experience to
43 safely fulfill the assignment without compromising or jeopardizing
44 patient safety, the nurse's ability to meet foreseeable patient needs,
45 or the nurse's license.
46 (b) The nurse has volunteered to work overtime but determines that his
47 or her level of fatigue and/or decreased alertness would compromise or
48 jeopardize patient safety, the nurse's ability to meet foreseeable
49 patient needs, or the nurse's license.
50 (c) The assignment otherwise would violate requirements established
51 pursuant to this article.
52 3. At a minimum, the work assignment policy shall contain procedures
53 for the following:
54 (a) Reasonable requirements for prior notice to a nurse's supervisor
55 regarding the nurse's request and supporting reasons for being relieved
56 of an assignment or continued duty.
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1 (b) Where feasible, an opportunity for the supervisor to review the
2 specific conditions supporting the nurse's request, and to decide wheth-
3 er to remedy the conditions, to relieve the nurse of the assignment, or
4 to deny the nurse's request to be relieved of the assignment or contin-
5 ued duty.
6 (c) A process which permits the nurse to exercise the right to refuse
7 the assignment or continued on-duty status when the supervisor denies
8 the request to be relieved if:
9 (i) The supervisor rejects the request without proposing a remedy, or
10 the proposed remedy would be inadequate or untimely.
11 (ii) The complaint and investigation process with the department would
12 be untimely to address the concern.
13 (iii) The employee in good faith believes that the assignment meets
14 conditions justifying refusal.
15 4. An employee is deemed to act in good faith if the employee reason-
16 ably believes that the information reported or disclosed is true, and
17 that a violation has occurred or may occur. A healthcare facility
18 covered by this article shall not penalize, discriminate or retaliate in
19 any manner against an employee with respect to compensation, terms,
20 conditions or privileges of employment, who in good faith, individually
21 or in conjunction with another person or persons:
22 (a) Reports a violation or suspected violation of this section to a
23 public regulatory agency, a private accreditation body, or management
24 personnel of the healthcare facility,
25 (b) Initiates, cooperates or otherwise participates in an investi-
26 gation or proceeding brought by a regulatory agency or private accredi-
27 tation body concerning matters covered by this section,
28 (c) Informs or discusses with other employees, with representative or
29 representatives of the employees, with patients or patient represen-
30 tatives, or with the public, violations or suspected violations of this
31 section, or
32 (d) Otherwise avails himself or herself of the rights established
33 pursuant to this article.
34 § 2899-ee. Enforcement. 1. Notwithstanding any right of action granted
35 to any governmental body pursuant to this article, any person who has
36 been injured by reason of a violation of this article may bring an
37 action in his or her own name to enjoin such unlawful act, or an action
38 to recover his or her actual damages, or both such actions.
39 2. This article shall be enforced by the commissioner, who shall
40 promulgate such regulations as are necessary to implement and administer
41 compliance. Regulations shall include procedures to receive, investi-
42 gate, and attempt to resolve complaints, and bring actions in any court
43 of competent jurisdiction to recover appropriate relief for aggrieved
44 employees.
45 3. No healthcare facility shall discharge, demote, harass or otherwise
46 take adverse actions against any individual because such individual
47 seeks to enforce this article, or testifies, assists or participates in
48 any manner in an investigation, hearing or other proceeding to enforce
49 this article.
50 4. In any action under this article in which an employee prevails:
51 (a) The employee shall be awarded monetary relief, including back pay
52 in an amount equal to the difference between the employee's actual earn-
53 ings and what the employee would have earned but for the healthcare
54 facility's unlawful practices, and an additional amount in punitive
55 damages, as appropriate.
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1 (b) The healthcare facility shall be enjoined from continuing to
2 violate the provisions of this article and may be ordered to take such
3 additional affirmative steps as are necessary to ensure an end to the
4 unlawful practices.
5 (c) The healthcare facility shall pay a reasonable attorney's fee,
6 reasonable expert witness fees, and other costs of the action.
7 § 4. This act shall take effect on the first of July next succeeding
8 the date on which it shall have become a law. Effective immediately the
9 addition, amendment and/or repeal of any rule or regulation necessary
10 for the implementation of this act on its effective date are authorized
11 to be made on or before such date.