Nurses monitoring lawmakers’ push for OSHA to create an anti-workplace violence rule

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TWO NURSES PREPARE to enter the U.S. Capitol on their way to a House Committee work session which saw lawmakers OK a National Nurses United-pushed bill to order OSHA to draw up a standard, within 42 months, mandating hospitals and nursing homes enact and implement plans to prevent workplace violence against health care workers. – NNU photo via PAI

Washington (PAI)—With National Nurses United (NNU) members in the crowd monitoring them, the Democratic-run House Education and Labor Committee voted almost on party lines to push the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to issue a rule, within a year, to force hospitals and nursing homes to create and implement programs to prevent workplace violence.

The measure, HR1309, was one of three pro-worker bills the panel approved on June 11. All also overcame opposition from panel Republicans, though Reps. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) and Robert Roe (R-Tenn.) voted for HR1309. Republican opponents predicted the GOP-run Senate would deep-six what they called “an overly partisan bill.”

HR1309 would tell OSHA to issue an interim rule within a year to force the institutions to move, and a final rule within 42 months. That’s far faster than OSHA often issues rules, as bosses often use delays and lawsuits to stop the measures. OSHA’s beryllium standard took 19 years.

“This (bill) is a huge step forward in our fight to get these protections across the finish line,” said NNU Co-President Jean Ross, RN, who attended the hearing with her fellow nurses.

“Health care and social service workers face rates of workplace violence more than three times higher than workers overall. HR1309 enshrines the only protections that have proven to help stop this violence before it occurs — by making employers accountable for having a comprehensive, unit-specific prevention plan in place,” Ross added.

HIGHER RATE OF INJURIES DUE TO VIOLENCE
“Registered nurses reported more than three times the rate of injuries due to workplace violence than workers overall. We deserve to feel safe at work! Tell your Congress member to support HR1309,” another NNU member tweeted.

Teachers (AFT) President Randi Weingarten, whose union represents school nurses, among others, also wrote in favor of the legislation.
NNU also cited a Bureau of Labor Statistics census of fatal job-related injuries that “at least 58 hospital workers died as a result of violence in their workplaces” from 2011-16. And the measure’s sponsor, Rep. Joe Courtney (D-Conn.) quoted the head of the Cleveland Clinic as saying his facility alone confiscated 30,000 weapons from patients’ family members in 2018.

“Health care and social service workers suffer injuries from workplace violence at higher rates than other workers,” panel chairman Bobby Scott (D-Va.) said. “This is a serious concern for 15 million workers.”

PROTECT WORKERS, PATIENTS
“This will protect not only health care workers, but patients as well,” said Rep. Andy Levin (D-Mich.), who said he first learned of the prevalence of health care workplace violence when he was an organizer for the Service Employees 20 years ago.

“Employers must be held accountable for a clear and enforceable standard,” said Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) Such “terrible” assaults “are predictable and preventable,” she added. “It’s management’s role and responsibility to prevent this violence.”

HR1309 would order hospitals, nursing homes and caregivers to share information about potentially violent patients, order the health care facilities to train their workers on de-escalating violent situations, tell them to erect protective barriers and enact protections for whistleblowers, among other mandates, said Courtney.

70% OF ALL WORKPLACE VIOLENCE INJURIES
Even the panel’s former chair, Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-N.C.) admitted 70 percent of all workplace violence injuries hit health care and social service workers. But she – and other Republicans – contended “OSHA is finally doing its job by seeking the input of those who know better than we do” about the issue. She claimed Congress “will do great harm by rushing the process.”

Foxx, who once questioned whether unions are even necessary, criticized HR1309 as “haphazard legislating” that “rushes” OSHA’s rule “and short-circuits the opinions of those who know better than we.”

Rep. Bradley Byrne (R-Ala.) known for hating unions and workers, said employers should be able to comment i.e. stall. He then offered a Republican substitute to gut the bill. It failed.


 

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