A06571 Summary:

BILL NOA06571
 
SAME ASSAME AS S03691-A
 
SPONSORGottfried (MS)
 
COSPNSRGunther, Millman, Clark, Jacobs, Peoples-Stokes, Rosenthal, Brindisi, Bronson, Colton, Benedetto, Camara, Jaffee, Magnarelli, Markey, Miller, Weprin, Rivera, Roberts, Ryan, Skartados, Sepulveda, Aubry, Otis, Skoufis, Steck, Mayer, Santabarbara, Zebrowski, Brook-Krasny, Mosley, Ortiz, Titus
 
MLTSPNSRAbbate, Abinanti, Arroyo, Brennan, Butler, Cahill, Ceretto, Cook, Crespo, Cusick, Cymbrowitz, Davila, Dinowitz, Englebright, Fahy, Farrell, Glick, Graf, Heastie, Hooper, Johns, Kearns, Kellner, Lavine, Lifton, Lupardo, Lupinacci, Magee, McDonough, McKevitt, Montesano, Nolan, Paulin, Perry, Pretlow, Ra, Ramos, Robinson, Russell, Saladino, Scarborough, Schimel, Simotas, Solages, Sweeney, Tedisco, Thiele, Titone, Weinstein, Weisenberg, Wright
 
Amd Pub Health L, generally
 
Enacts the "safe staffing for quality care act" to require acute care facilities and nursing homes to implement certain direct-care nurse to patient ratios in all nursing units; sets minimum staffing requirements; requires every such facility to submit a documented staffing plan to the department on an annual basis and upon application for an operating certificate; requires acute care facilities to maintain staffing records during all shifts; authorizes nurses to refuse work assignments if the assignment exceeds the nurse's abilities or if minimum staffing is not present; requires public access to documented staffing plans; imposes civil penalties for violations of such provisions; establishes private right of action for nurses discriminated against for refusing any illegal work assignment.
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A06571 Actions:

BILL NOA06571
 
04/10/2013referred to health
06/04/2013reported referred to codes
06/05/2013reported referred to ways and means
01/08/2014referred to health
05/20/2014reported referred to codes
06/19/2014reported referred to ways and means
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A06571 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A6571
 
SPONSOR: Gottfried (MS)
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the public health law, in relation to enacting the "safe staffing for quality care act"   PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL: To require all acute care facilities and nursing homes to meet standards for appropriate staffing ratios of nursing and unlicensed direct care staff.   SUMMARY OF SPECIFIC PROVISIONS: Section 1 is the short title. Section 2 amends Public Health Law § 2805 to require that application for operating certificates for a hospital include a direct care staffing plan. Section 3 adds nine new sections, 2823 through 2531, which require hospitals to maintain and comply with a. staffing plan; establish the Acute Care facility Council to be appointed by the Commissioner of Health, enumerate the elements of a satisfactory staffing, plan; set forth minimum nurse to patient ratios; require clinical competency: provide for emergency situations; require public disclosure of facility staffing requirements: and allows for private right of action by employ- ees. Section 4 amends § 2801-a directing the Public Health and Health Plan- ning Council to consider staffing violations when reviewing "character, competence and standing in the community" for applications and renewals of certificates of incorporation or establishment of a hospital. Section 5 amends § 2805 requiring the Commissioner to consider staffing violations when reviewing applications and renewals operating certif- icates for acute care facilities. Section 6 amends § 2895-b to establish a Residential Health Care Facili- ty Council to be appointed by the Commissioner; requires minimum staff- hours of care per resident per day; allows for private right of action by employees: and requires public disclosure of information about direct care staffing.   JUSTIFICATION:; The hospital nurse-to-patient ratios specified in this bill are based on peer-reviewed academic research and evidence-based recommendations. The minimum care hours specified for residential health care facilities are also based on research evidence and on the recommen- dations of the Institute of Medicine's report, "Keeping Patients Safe: Transforming the Work Environment of Nurses" (2004). The number of patients assigned to a nurse has a direct impact on the quality of care that nurse can provide. Research published in the Jour- nal of the American Medical Association, estimates five additional deaths per 1,000 patients in hospitals which routinely staff with only 1:8 nurse-to-patient ratios compared to those staffing with 1:4 nurse- to-patient ratios. This same study determined the odds of patient death increased by 7% for each additional patient the nurse must care for at one time. Safe nurse staffing also reduces avoidable, adverse patient outcomes. Research funded by the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quali- ty (AHRQ) has demonstrated that hospitals with lower nurse staffing levels have higher rates of pneumonia, shock, cardiac arrest, urinary tract infections and upper gastrointestinal bleeds; all leading to high- er costs and mortality from hospital-acquired complications. In nursing homes, research has demonstrated that safe nurse staffing levels have a positive impact on facility processes and on resident outcomes. Research has demonstrated that as nurse turnover increases in nursing homes, the quality of resident care declines, resulting in more frequent use of restraints, urinary catheterization, and psychoactive drugs; increased risk of contractures, pressure ulcers and more survey deficiencies. A broad range of research demonstrates that increased staffing levels do not diminish the profitability of facilities. Nursing workforce costs may rise, but that increase is mitigated by overall savings from improved patient outcomes and avoided adverse events. The improved outcomes reduce medical malpractice and other penalties resulting from avoidable occurrences and poor patient satisfaction. In 2004, California became the first state to mandate nurse staffing ratios in hospitals. New statistical analysis reveals that the Califor- nia mandates are significantly associated with fewer negative outcomes .for patients and staff. The study, published in Health Services Research and conducted by the Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research, University of Pennsylvania, concluded that 'improved muse staffing, however it is achieved, is associated with better outcomes for nurses and patients." Establishing staffing standards for nursing and unlicensed direct care staff in acute care facilities and residential health care facilities will help ensure that these facilities operate in a manner that guaran- tees the public safety and the delivery of quality health care services.   PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: 2009-2010: A.11015- referred to Health committee. 2011-2012: A.921- reported to Ways and Means committee   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: Some staff time in the Department of Health; possible increased Medicaid spending to cover the cost of increased staffing balanced by reduced Medicaid spending as reduced .bad outcomes and reduced staff turnover reduce health care costs.   EFFECTIVE DATE: Takes effect 180 days after it becomes law.
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A06571 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          6571
 
                               2013-2014 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                     April 10, 2013
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M.  of  A.  GOTTFRIED,  GUNTHER, MILLMAN, CLARK, JACOBS,
          PEOPLES-STOKES,  ROSENTHAL,  BRINDISI,  BRONSON,  COLTON,   BENEDETTO,
          CAMARA, GABRYSZAK, JAFFEE, MAGNARELLI, MARKEY, MILLER, WEPRIN, RIVERA,
          ROBERTS,  RYAN,  SKARTADOS  --  Multi-Sponsored by -- M. of A. ABBATE,
          ABINANTI, ARROYO,  BARRON,  BOYLAND,  BRENNAN,  BROOK-KRASNY,  BUTLER,

          CAHILL,  COOK,  CRESPO,  CUSICK,  CYMBROWITZ,  DINOWITZ,  ENGLEBRIGHT,
          FARRELL, GIGLIO, GLICK, GRAF, HEASTIE, HOOPER, JOHNS, KEARNS, KELLNER,
          LAVINE, LIFTON, LUPARDO, MAGEE, MAISEL, McDONOUGH, McKEVITT,  MONTESA-
          NO,  NOLAN,  ORTIZ,  PAULIN, PERRY, PRETLOW, RA, RABBITT, RAIA, RAMOS,
          ROBINSON, RUSSELL, SALADINO, SCARBOROUGH, SCHIMEL,  SWEENEY,  TEDISCO,
          THIELE,  TITONE, TITUS, WEINSTEIN, WEISENBERG, WRIGHT -- read once and
          referred to the Committee on Health
 
        AN ACT to amend the public health law, in relation to enacting the "safe
          staffing for quality 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 and may be cited as
     2  the "safe staffing for quality care act".

     3    § 2. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subdivision 2 of section  2805  of  the
     4  public  health  law, paragraph (a) as amended by chapter 923 of the laws
     5  of 1973 and paragraph (b) as added by chapter 795 of the laws  of  1965,
     6  are amended to read as follows:
     7    (a)  Application  for an operating certificate for a hospital shall be
     8  made upon forms prescribed by  the  department.  The  application  shall
     9  [contain]  include the name of the hospital, the kind or kinds of hospi-
    10  tal service to be provided, the location and physical description of the
    11  institution, a documented staffing plan, as defined in  section  twenty-
    12  eight hundred twenty-four of this article, and such other information as
    13  the department may require.
    14    (b)  An  operating  certificate  shall not be issued by the department

    15  unless it finds that  the  premises,  equipment,  personnel,  documented
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD02578-04-3

        A. 6571                             2
 
     1  staffing  plan, rules and by-laws, standards of medical care, and hospi-
     2  tal service are fit and adequate and that the hospital will be  operated
     3  in  the manner required by this article and rules and regulations there-
     4  under.
     5    §  3.  The  public  health  law is amended by adding nine new sections
     6  2823-a, 2824, 2825, 2826, 2827, 2828, 2829, 2830 and  2831  to  read  as
     7  follows:
     8    §  2823-a.  Policy and purpose. The legislature finds and declares all

     9  of the following:
    10    1. Health care services are becoming complex and  it  is  increasingly
    11  difficult for patients to access integrated services;
    12    2.  The quality of patient care is jeopardized because of nurse staff-
    13  ing shortages and improper utilization of nursing services;
    14    3. To ensure the  adequate  protection  of  patients  in  health  care
    15  settings,  it  is  essential  that qualified registered nurses and other
    16  licensed nurses be  accessible  and  available  to  meet  the  needs  of
    17  patients; and
    18    4.  The basic principles of staffing in the health care setting should
    19  be based on  the  patient's  care  needs,  the  severity  of  condition,
    20  services needed and the complexity surrounding those services.

    21    §  2824.  Safe staffing; definitions. The following words and phrases,
    22  as used in this article, shall have the following  meanings  unless  the
    23  context otherwise plainly requires:
    24    1.  "Acute  care facility" shall mean a hospital other than a residen-
    25  tial health care facility and  shall  also  include  any  facility  that
    26  provides  health care services pursuant to the mental hygiene law, arti-
    27  cle nineteen-G of the executive law or the correction law if such facil-
    28  ity is operated by the state or a political subdivision of the state  or
    29  a public authority or public benefit corporation.
    30    2.  "Acuity  system"  shall mean an established measurement instrument
    31  which (a) predicts nursing care  requirements  for  individual  patients

    32  based on severity of patient illness, need for specialized equipment and
    33  technology,   intensity  of  nursing  interventions  required,  and  the
    34  complexity of clinical nursing judgment needed to design, implement  and
    35  evaluate  the  patient's  nursing  care  plan; (b) details the amount of
    36  nursing care needed, both in number of direct-care nurses and  in  skill
    37  mix of nursing personnel required, on a daily basis, for each patient in
    38  a  nursing  department  or unit; and (c) is stated in terms that readily
    39  can be used and understood by  direct-care  nurses.  The  acuity  system
    40  shall  take  into  consideration  the patient care services provided not
    41  only by registered professional nurses but also  by  licensed  practical

    42  nurses, social workers and other health care personnel.
    43    3. "Assessment tool" shall mean a measurement system that compares the
    44  staffing level in each nursing department or unit against actual patient
    45  nursing  care  requirements in order to review the accuracy of an acuity
    46  system.
    47    4. "Direct-care nurse" and "direct-care nursing staff" shall mean  any
    48  nurse  who  has principal responsibility to oversee or carry out medical
    49  regimens, nursing or other bedside care for one or more patients.
    50    5. "Documented staffing plan"  shall  mean  a  detailed  written  plan
    51  setting forth the minimum number and classification of direct-care nurs-
    52  es required in each nursing department or unit in an acute care facility

    53  for  a  given  year,  based  on  reasonable projections derived from the
    54  patient census and average acuity level within each department  or  unit
    55  during  the  prior  year, the department or unit size and geography, the

        A. 6571                             3
 
     1  nature of services provided and any foreseeable changes in department or
     2  unit size or function during the current year.
     3    6.  "Nurse"  shall  mean  a  registered professional nurse or licensed
     4  practical nurse licensed pursuant to article one hundred thirty-nine  of
     5  the education law.
     6    7.  "Nursing care" shall mean that care which is within the definition
     7  of the practice of nursing pursuant to section sixty-nine hundred two of

     8  the education law, or otherwise encompassed with the  recognized  stand-
     9  ards of nursing practice, including assessment, nursing diagnosis, plan-
    10  ning, intervention, evaluation and patient advocacy.
    11    8.  "Safe staffing requirements" shall mean the provisions of sections
    12  twenty-eight hundred twenty-three-a through twenty-eight  hundred  thir-
    13  ty-one  of  this  article and all rules and regulations adopted pursuant
    14  thereto.
    15    9. "Skill mix" shall mean the differences in licensing, specialty  and
    16  experience among direct-care nurses.
    17    10.  "Staffing level" shall mean the actual numerical nurse to patient
    18  ratio within a nursing department or unit.
    19    11. "Unit" shall mean a patient care  component,  as  defined  by  the

    20  department, within an acute care facility.
    21    12. "Non-nursing direct-care staff" shall mean any employee who is not
    22  a  nurse  or  other person licensed, certified or registered under title
    23  eight of the education law whose principal responsibility  is  to  carry
    24  out  patient care for one or more patients or provides direct assistance
    25  in the delivery of patient care.
    26    § 2825. Commissioner and council; powers and duties. The  commissioner
    27  shall:
    28    1.  appoint  an  acute  care  facility  council consisting of thirteen
    29  members. No less than seven members  shall  be  registered  professional
    30  nurses,  three  of whom shall be direct care registered nurses, three of

    31  whom shall be nurse managers and one of whom shall be a  nurse  adminis-
    32  trator.  No  less  than  two  members of the acute care facility council
    33  shall be representatives of recognized or certified collective  bargain-
    34  ing agents of non-nursing direct care staff. There shall be at least two
    35  representatives  of acute care facilities, one representative of a nurs-
    36  ing professional association, and one representative of a recognized  or
    37  certified  bargaining  agent  of nurses. The acute care facility council
    38  shall advise the commissioner in the development of regulations, includ-
    39  ing registered professional nurse to patient staffing  requirements  and
    40  non-nursing  direct-care  staff to patient ratios that are not specified

    41  in this article; the efficacy of acuity systems submitted  for  approval
    42  by the commissioner; the development of an assessment tool used to eval-
    43  uate the efficacy of acuity systems; and review and make recommendations
    44  on  approval  of  staffing  plans  prior to the granting of an operating
    45  certificate by the department.
    46    2. promulgate, after consultation with the acute care  facility  coun-
    47  cil,  the  rules and regulations necessary to carry out the purposes and
    48  provisions of the  safe  staffing  requirements,  including  regulations
    49  defining  terms,  setting  forth  direct-care  nurse  to patient ratios,
    50  setting forth  non-nursing  direct-care  staff  to  patient  ratios  and

    51  prescribing  the process for approving facility specific acuity systems;
    52  and
    53    3. assure that  the  provisions  of  safe  staffing  requirements  are
    54  enforced,  including  the  issuance  of  regulations  which at a minimum
    55  provide for an accessible and confidential system to report the  failure
    56  to  comply  with  such  requirements  and  public  access to information

        A. 6571                             4
 
     1  regarding reports of inspections, results, deficiencies and  corrections
     2  pursuant to such requirements.
     3    §  2826.  Staffing  requirements. 1. Staffing requirements. Each acute
     4  care facility shall ensure that it is staffed in a manner that  provides

     5  sufficient,  appropriately  qualified direct-care nurses in each depart-
     6  ment or unit within such facility in order to  meet  the  individualized
     7  care  needs  of  the  patients therein. At a minimum, each such facility
     8  shall meet the requirements  of  subdivisions  two  and  three  of  this
     9  section.
    10    2.  Staffing plan. The department shall not issue an operating certif-
    11  icate to any acute care facility unless such facility  annually  submits
    12  to the department a documented staffing plan and a written certification
    13  that  the  submitted staffing plan is sufficient to provide adequate and
    14  appropriate delivery of health care services to patients for the ensuing
    15  year. The documented staffing plan shall:

    16    (a) meet the minimum requirements set forth in  subdivision  three  of
    17  this section;
    18    (b)  be adequate to meet any additional requirements provided by other
    19  laws, rules or regulations;
    20    (c) employ and identify an acuity system for  addressing  fluctuations
    21  in  actual patient acuity levels and nursing care requirements requiring
    22  increased staffing levels above the minimums set forth in the plan;
    23    (d) factor in other unit or department activity  such  as  discharges,
    24  transfers  and  admissions,  staff  breaks,  meals, routine and expected
    25  absences from the unit and administrative and  support  tasks  that  are
    26  expected  to be done by direct-care nurses in addition to direct nursing
    27  care;

    28    (e) include a plan to meet  necessary  staffing  levels  and  services
    29  provided  by non-nursing direct-care staff in meeting patient care needs
    30  pursuant to subdivision one of this section; provided, however, that the
    31  staffing plan shall not incorporate or assume that  nursing  care  func-
    32  tions  required  by laws, rules or regulations, or accepted standards of
    33  practice to be performed by a registered professional nurse  are  to  be
    34  performed by other personnel;
    35    (f)  identify the system that will be used to document actual staffing
    36  on a daily basis within each department or unit;
    37    (g) include a written assessment of the accuracy of the  prior  year's
    38  staffing plan in light of actual staffing needs;

    39    (h)  identify  each nurse staff classification referenced in such plan
    40  together with a statement setting forth minimum qualifications for  each
    41  such classification; and
    42    (i)  be  developed  in consultation with a majority of the direct-care
    43  nurses within each department or unit or, where such nurses are  repres-
    44  ented, with the applicable recognized or certified collective bargaining
    45  representative or representatives of the direct-care nurses and of other
    46  supportive and assistive staff.
    47    3.  Minimum  staffing  requirements.  (a) The documented staffing plan
    48  shall incorporate, at a minimum, the following direct-care  nurse-to-pa-
    49  tient ratios:
    50    (i)  one  nurse  to  one  patient: operating room and trauma emergency

    51  units and maternal/child care units for the second  or  third  stage  of
    52  labor;
    53    (ii)  one  nurse  to two patients:   maternal/child care units for the
    54  first stage of labor, and all critical care  areas  including  emergency
    55  critical care and all intensive care units and postanesthesia units;

        A. 6571                             5
 
     1    (iii)  one nurse to three patients: antepartum, emergency room, pedia-
     2  trics, step-down and telemetry units and units for newborns and interme-
     3  diate care nursery units;
     4    (iv)  one  nurse  to three patients:   postpartum mother/baby couplets
     5  (maximum six patients per nurse);
     6    (v) one nurse to  four  patients:  non-critical  antepartum  patients,

     7  postpartum mother only units and medical/surgical and acute care psychi-
     8  atric units;
     9    (vi)  one  nurse  to  five patients: rehabilitation units and subacute
    10  patients; and
    11    (vii) one nurse to six patients: well-baby nursery units.
    12    For any units not listed in this paragraph, including, but not limited
    13  to, psychiatric units, and acute care facilities  operated  pursuant  to
    14  the  mental  hygiene  law  or  the  correction law, the department shall
    15  establish by regulation  the  appropriate  direct-care  nurse-to-patient
    16  ratio.
    17    (b)  The  nurse-to-patient  ratios  set forth in paragraph (a) of this
    18  subdivision shall reflect the maximum number of  patients  that  may  be

    19  assigned to each direct-care nurse in a unit at any one time.
    20    (c)  There  shall  be  no  averaging of the number of patients and the
    21  total number of nurses on the unit during any one  shift  nor  over  any
    22  period of time.
    23    (d)  The  commissioner,  in  consultation with the acute care facility
    24  council, shall establish regulations providing for  the  maintenance  of
    25  minimum nurse-to-patient ratios, as set forth in this section, including
    26  during  routine  or  expected  absences  from the unit, such as meals or
    27  breaks.
    28    4. Licensed practical nurses. In any situation in which licensed prac-
    29  tical nurses are included in the documented staffing plan, any  patients

    30  assigned  to  the  licensed  practical  nurse  shall also be included in
    31  calculating the number of patients assigned to  any  registered  profes-
    32  sional nurse who is required by law, rule, regulation, contract or prac-
    33  tice  to  supervise  or  oversee the direct-nursing care provided by the
    34  licensed practical nurse.
    35    5. Skill mix. The skill mix shall not incorporate or assume that nurs-
    36  ing care functions required by section sixty-nine  hundred  two  of  the
    37  education  law  or  accepted  standards of practice to be performed by a
    38  registered professional nurse are to be performed by a licensed  practi-
    39  cal  nurse or unlicensed assistive personnel, or that nursing care func-
    40  tions required by section sixty-nine hundred two of the education law or

    41  accepted standards of practice to be performed by a  licensed  practical
    42  nurse are to be performed by unlicensed assistive personnel.
    43    6.  Adjustments  by  facility.    The minimum staffing requirement and
    44  nurse-to-patient ratio set forth in this section shall  be  adjusted  by
    45  the  acute care facility as necessary to reflect the need for additional
    46  direct-care nurses.  Additional staff shall be  assigned  in  accordance
    47  with the approved, facility-specific patient acuity system for determin-
    48  ing  nursing  care  requirements, including the severity of the illness,
    49  the need for specialized equipment and  technology,  the  complexity  of
    50  clinical  judgment  needed to design, implement and evaluate the patient

    51  care plan and the ability  for  self-care,  and  the  licensure  of  the
    52  personnel required for care.
    53    7.  Commissioner  regulations.    The  commissioner  may by regulation
    54  require a documented  staffing  plan  to  have  higher  nurse-to-patient
    55  ratios than those set forth in this section.

        A. 6571                             6
 
     1    8.   Nothing contained in this section shall supersede or diminish the
     2  terms of a collective bargaining agreement that  provides  for  staffing
     3  ratios that exceed the ratios established under this section.
     4    §  2827.  Compliance  with  staffing plan and recordkeeping. 1.   Each
     5  acute care facility shall at all times  staff  in  accordance  with  its

     6  documented staffing plan and the staffing standards set forth in section
     7  twenty-eight hundred twenty-six of this article; provided, however, that
     8  nothing  in  this  section shall be deemed to preclude any such facility
     9  from implementing higher direct-care nurse-to-patient  staffing  levels,
    10  nor  shall  the  requirements  set  forth  in  such section twenty-eight
    11  hundred twenty-six of this article be deemed to supersede or replace any
    12  higher requirements otherwise mandated by law, regulation or contract.
    13    2. For purposes of compliance with the minimum  staffing  requirements
    14  standards  set  forth in section twenty-eight hundred twenty-six of this
    15  article, no nurse shall be assigned, or included in the nurse-to-patient

    16  ratio count in a nursing unit or a clinical area within  an  acute  care
    17  facility  unless that nurse has an appropriate license pursuant to arti-
    18  cle one hundred thirty-nine of the education  law,  has  received  prior
    19  orientation  in that clinical area sufficient to provide competent nurs-
    20  ing care to the patients in that unit or clinical area, and  has  demon-
    21  strated  current  competence  in providing care in that unit or clinical
    22  area. Acute care facilities  that  utilize  temporary  nursing  agencies
    23  shall  have  and  adhere  to  a written procedure to orient and evaluate
    24  personnel from such sources to ensure adequate orientation and competen-
    25  cy prior to inclusion in the nurse-to-patient ratio.  In the event of an

    26  emergency staffing situation in which insufficient staffing may lead  to
    27  unsafe  patient  care, nurses may be temporarily assigned to a different
    28  unit or clinical area, provided  that  such  nurses  shall  be  assigned
    29  patients  appropriate  to their skill and competency level. The facility
    30  shall establish a consistent  plan  for  addressing  emergency  staffing
    31  situations  and  monitor  outcomes.   Emergencies are defined as natural
    32  disasters, declared emergencies, mass casualty incidents or other events
    33  not reasonably anticipated and planned for and not  regularly  occurring
    34  within the facility.
    35    3.  Each  acute  care  facility  shall maintain accurate daily records
    36  showing:

    37    (a) the number of patients admitted,  released  and  present  in  each
    38  nursing department or unit within such facility;
    39    (b)  the individual acuity level of each patient present in each nurs-
    40  ing department or unit within such facility; and
    41    (c) the identity and duty hours of  each  direct-care  nurse  in  each
    42  nursing department or unit within such facility.
    43    4.  Each acute care facility shall maintain daily statistics, by nurs-
    44  ing department and unit, of mortality, morbidity,  infection,  accident,
    45  injury and medical errors.
    46    5.  All  records required to be kept pursuant to this section shall be
    47  maintained for a period of seven years.
    48    6. All records required to be kept pursuant to this section  shall  be

    49  made  available  upon  request  to  the  department  and  to the public;
    50  provided, however, that information released to the public shall  comply
    51  with  the  applicable  patient  privacy laws, rules and regulations, and
    52  that in facilities operated pursuant to the correction law the  identity
    53  and hours of staff shall not be released to the public.
    54    §  2828. Work assignment policy. 1. General.  Each acute care facility
    55  shall adopt, disseminate to direct-care nurses and comply with a written
    56  work assignment policy, that meets the requirements of subdivisions  two

        A. 6571                             7
 
     1  and  three  of  this  section, detailing the circumstances under which a
     2  direct-care nurse may refuse a work assignment.

     3    2.  Minimum conditions. At a minimum, the work assignment policy shall
     4  permit a direct-care nurse to refuse an assignment:
     5    (a) for which the nurse is not  prepared  by  education,  training  or
     6  experience  to  safely  fulfill  the  assignment without compromising or
     7  jeopardizing patient safety, the nurse's  ability  to  meet  foreseeable
     8  patient needs or the nurse's license; or
     9    (b) would otherwise violate the safe staffing requirements.
    10    3.  Minimum procedures. At a minimum, the work assignment policy shall
    11  contain procedures for the following:
    12    (a) reasonable requirements for prior notice to the nurse's supervisor
    13  regarding the nurse's request and supporting reasons for being  relieved

    14  of an assignment or continued duty;
    15    (b)  where  feasible,  an opportunity for the supervisor to review the
    16  specific conditions supporting the nurse's request, and to decide wheth-
    17  er to remedy the conditions, to relieve the nurse of the assignment,  or
    18  to  deny the nurse's request to be relieved of the assignment or contin-
    19  ued duty;
    20    (c) a process that permits the nurse to exercise the right  to  refuse
    21  the  assignment  or  continued on-duty status when the supervisor denies
    22  the request to be relieved if:
    23    (i) the supervisor rejects the request without proposing a  remedy  or
    24  the proposed remedy would be inadequate or untimely,
    25    (ii)  the complaint and investigation process with a regulatory agency

    26  would be untimely to address the concern, and
    27    (iii) the employee in good faith believes that  the  assignment  meets
    28  conditions justifying refusal; and
    29    (d)  recognition  that a nurse who refuses an assignment pursuant to a
    30  work assignment policy as set forth in this section shall not be deemed,
    31  by reason thereof, to have engaged in negligent or  incompetent  action,
    32  patient  abandonment,  or otherwise to have violated any law relating to
    33  nursing.
    34    § 2829. Public disclosure of staffing requirements. Every  acute  care
    35  facility shall:
    36    1.  post  in  a  conspicuous  place  readily accessible to the general
    37  public a notice prepared by the department setting forth  a  summary  of

    38  the safe staffing requirements applicable to that facility together with
    39  information about where detailed information about the facility's staff-
    40  ing plan and actual staffing may be obtained;
    41    2.  upon  request,  make  copies of the documented staffing plan filed
    42  with the department available to the public; and
    43    3. upon request make readily available to the nursing staff  within  a
    44  department or unit, during each work shift, the following information:
    45    (a) a copy of the current staffing plan for that department or unit,
    46    (b)  documentation  of the number of direct-care nurses required to be
    47  present during the shift, based on the approved adopted  acuity  system,
    48  and

    49    (c)  documentation  of the actual number of direct-care nurses present
    50  during the shift.
    51    § 2830. Enforcement responsibilities. The department shall  not  dele-
    52  gate  its  responsibilities  to  enforce  the safe staffing requirements
    53  promulgated pursuant to this article.
    54    § 2831. Private right of action for violations of section twenty-eight
    55  hundred twenty-eight of this article.   Any  acute  care  facility  that
    56  violates  the  rights of an employee pursuant to an adopted work assign-

        A. 6571                             8
 
     1  ment policy under section  twenty-eight  hundred  twenty-eight  of  this
     2  article  may  be  held liable to such employee in an action brought in a

     3  court of competent jurisdiction for such legal or  equitable  relief  as
     4  may  be  appropriate  to  effectuate  the  purposes of the safe staffing
     5  requirements, including but not  limited  to  reinstatement,  promotion,
     6  lost  wages  and  benefits,  and  compensatory and consequential damages
     7  resulting from the violation together with an equal amount in liquidated
     8  damages. The court in such action shall, in  addition  to  any  judgment
     9  awarded  to a prevailing plaintiff, award reasonable attorneys' fees and
    10  costs of action to be paid by the  defendant.  An  employee's  right  to
    11  institute  a  private  action  pursuant to this subdivision shall not be
    12  limited by any other right granted by the safe staffing requirements.

    13    § 4. Section 2801-a of the public health law is amended  by  adding  a
    14  new subdivision 3-b to read as follows:
    15    3-b. In considering character, competence and standing in the communi-
    16  ty under subdivision three of this section, the public health and health
    17  planning  council shall consider any past violations of state or federal
    18  rules, regulations or statutes relating to employer-employee  relations,
    19  workplace safety, collective bargaining or any other labor related prac-
    20  tices, obligations or imperatives. The public health and health planning
    21  council shall give substantial weight to violations of the provisions of
    22  this chapter concerning nurse staff and supportive staff ratios.
    23    §  5. Section 2805 of the public health law is amended by adding a new

    24  subdivision 3 to read as follows:
    25    3. In determining whether to issue or renew an  operating  certificate
    26  to  an applicant seeking to operate, or operating, a hospital in accord-
    27  ance with  this  article,  the  commissioner  shall  consider  any  past
    28  violations  of  state or federal rules, regulations or statutes relating
    29  to employer-employee relations, workplace safety, collective  bargaining
    30  or  any  other  labor related practices, obligations or imperatives. The
    31  public health and health planning council shall give substantial  weight
    32  to  violations  of the provisions of this chapter concerning nurse staff
    33  and supportive staff ratios.
    34    § 6. The public health law is amended by adding a new  section  2895-b
    35  to read as follows:

    36    §  2895-b.  Residential health care facility staffing levels. 1. Defi-
    37  nitions. As used in this section, the following  terms  shall  have  the
    38  following meanings:
    39    (a)  "Certified  nurse aide" means any person included in the residen-
    40  tial health care facility nurse aide registry pursuant to section  twen-
    41  ty-eight hundred three-j of this chapter.
    42    (b)  "Staffing ratio" means the quotient of the number of personnel in
    43  a particular category regularly on duty for a particular time period  in
    44  a nursing home divided by the number of residents of the nursing home at
    45  that time.
    46    2.  Commissioner  and residential health care facility council; powers
    47  and duties. The commissioner shall: Appoint a  residential  health  care

    48  facility  council  consisting  of  thirteen  members.  No  less than two
    49  members shall be direct  care licensed practical nurses,  no  less  than
    50  two  members shall be direct care certified nurse assistants and no less
    51  than  one member shall be a direct care registered  professional  nurse.
    52  The  council  shall also include no less than one representative each of
    53  recognized or certified collective bargaining agents of registered nurs-
    54  es, of non-registered nurse direct care staff and  a  representative  of
    55  nursing  professional  associations.  The  council shall also include no
    56  less than two representatives of residential health care facility opera-

        A. 6571                             9
 

     1  tors, two representatives of  residential  health  care  facility  nurse
     2  administrators  and  one  representative  of  consumers. The residential
     3  health care facility council shall advise the commissioner in the devel-
     4  opment  of  regulations  relating  to  the staffing standards under this
     5  section; and may from time to time, report to the governor, the legisla-
     6  ture, the public and  the  commissioner  any  recommendations  regarding
     7  staffing levels in residential health care facilities.
     8    3. Staffing standards.  (a) The commissioner, in consultation with the
     9  council, shall, by regulation, establish staffing standards for residen-
    10  tial  health  care  facility  minimum staffing levels to meet applicable

    11  standards of service and care and to provide services to attain or main-
    12  tain the highest practicable physical, mental, and psychosocial well-be-
    13  ing of each resident  of  the  facility.  The  commissioner  shall  also
    14  require  by regulation that every residential health care facility main-
    15  tain records on its staffing levels,  report  on  such  records  to  the
    16  department,  and  make  such  records  available  for  inspection by the
    17  department.
    18    (b) Every residential health care facility shall:
    19    (i) comply with the staffing standards under this section; and
    20    (ii) employ sufficient staffing levels to meet applicable standards of
    21  service and care and to provide service and care and to provide services

    22  to attain or maintain the  highest  practicable  physical,  mental,  and
    23  psychosocial well-being of each resident of the facility.
    24    (c)  Subject  to  subdivision five of this section, staffing standards
    25  under this section shall, at a minimum, be the staffing standards  under
    26  subdivision four of this section.
    27    (d)  In  determining compliance with the staffing standards under this
    28  section, an individual shall not be counted  while  performing  services
    29  that  are not direct nursing care, such as administrative services, food
    30  preparation,  housekeeping,  laundry,  maintenance  services,  or  other
    31  activities that are not direct nursing care.
    32    4.    Statutory standard. Beginning two years after the effective date

    33  of this section, every residential health care facility shall maintain a
    34  staffing ratio equal to at least the following:
    35    (a) 2.8 hours of care per resident per day by a certified nurse aide;
    36    (b) 1.3 hours of care per resident per day  by  a  licensed  practical
    37  nurse or a registered nurse;
    38    (c) 0.75 hours of care per resident per day by a registered nurse; the
    39  minimum  of  0.75  hours  of  care per resident provided by a registered
    40  nurse shall be divided among all shifts to ensure an  appropriate  level
    41  of  registered  nurse care twenty-four hours per day, seven days a week,
    42  to meet resident needs; and
    43    (d) Residential health care facilities that care for subacute patients

    44  shall maintain at a minimum, the following direct-care  nurse-to-patient
    45  ratio: one nurse to five patients.
    46    5.    Any residential health care facility that violates the rights of
    47  an employee pursuant to an adopted work  assignment  policy  under  this
    48  section  may  be  held liable to such employee in an action brought in a
    49  court of competent jurisdiction for such legal or  equitable  relief  as
    50  may  be  appropriate  to  effectuate  the  purposes of the safe staffing
    51  requirements, including but not  limited  to  reinstatement,  promotion,
    52  lost  wages  and  benefits,  and  compensatory and consequential damages
    53  resulting from the violation together with an equal amount in liquidated

    54  damages. The court in such action shall, in  addition  to  any  judgment
    55  awarded  to a prevailing plaintiff, award reasonable attorneys' fees and
    56  costs of action to be paid by the  defendant.  An  employee's  right  to

        A. 6571                            10
 
     1  institute  a  private  action  pursuant to this subdivision shall not be
     2  limited by any other right granted by the safe staffing requirements.
     3    6. Public disclosure of staffing levels. (a) A residential health care
     4  facility shall post information regarding nurse staffing that the facil-
     5  ity  is  required  to make available to the public under section twenty-
     6  eight hundred five-t of this chapter.  Information under this  paragraph

     7  shall be displayed in a form approved by the department and be posted in
     8  a  manner  which  is visible and accessible to residents, their families
     9  and the staff, as required by the commissioner.
    10    (b) A residential health care facility shall post a  summary  of  this
    11  section,  provided  by  the  department,  in  proximity  to each posting
    12  required by paragraph (a) of this subdivision.
    13    § 7. If any provision of this act, or any application of any provision
    14  of this act, is held to be invalid, or ruled by any  federal  agency  to
    15  violate  or  be  inconsistent  with  any applicable federal law or regu-
    16  lation, that shall not affect the validity or effectiveness of any other
    17  provision of this act, or of any other application of any  provision  of
    18  this act.

    19    § 8. This act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after
    20  it shall have become a law, provided that any rules and regulations, and
    21  any  other  actions necessary to implement the provisions of this act on
    22  its effective date are authorized and directed to  be  completed  on  or
    23  before such date.
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