Nurses from Lower Bucks Hospital and beyond picketed outside the facility on Bath Road Monday morning during rush hours chanting “Unsafe staffing has to go!”
The crux of the issue says Shirley Crowell, R.N., co-president of the Nurses Association of Lower Bucks Hospital is when we need to leave the bedside and head outside to fight for safe staffing and quality of patient care, it breaks our hearts. But we’ll do it, because we are our patients’ best advocates.”
The Pennsylvania Association of Staff Nurses and Allied Professionals, or PASNAP, which represents the nurses says “it’s also a Prime strategy to augment their profits. In bargaining, hospital management has made proposals to gut the nurses’ contract, all the while ensuring that they are able to enrich themselves.”
Credit: Joanne Ames Lower Bucks Source
The nearly 200 unionized RNs and LPNs are both currently negotiating contracts with their mutual owner, Union officials say.
More to the point, the Union says “(t)here are shifts in which the Lower Bucks Hospital Emergency Department is staffed with just two nurses all night and there are no housekeeping staff available to take out waste and clean rooms.”
Amanda Whitaker, R.N., a Lower Bucks Hospital ICU nurse and member of the Nurses Association of Lower Bucks Hospital, is still fighting with Prime four years later to cover her son’s hospital stay when he was diagnosed with life-endangering RSV. “They deny, deny, deny without even looking at the situation,” she says. “Honestly, it feels like a punch in the face. We’re in healthcare and we can’t even afford health care. It’s wrong on so many levels.”
The nurses at Lower Bucks Hospital – some of whom have spent their entire careers here – are fiercely loyal to our patients, to our community, and to our hospital,” says Crowell. “But we shouldn’t have to beg for a decent healthcare plan or for wages that are comparable to those offered at surrounding hospitals. Where is the respect for what we bring to the bedside? Where is the respect for patient care?”
The Union says Lower Bucks Hospital CEO Michael Mott rakes in well over a quarter-million dollars per year while his hospital is short-staffed on a daily basis due to massive employee vacancies caused by poor compensation and benefits.
“Prime needs to take its nurses and our issues seriously,” says ICU nurse Anna Carlin, RN, co-president of the Nurses Association of Lower Bucks Hospital. “We need safe staffing for our patients’ protection, and we need a decent healthcare plan for our members so we can retain the experienced nurses we have and continue to serve our patient community to the very best of our abilities.”
Based in Southern California, Prime Healthcare is one of the largest for-profit hospital systems in the U.S., with more than 40 hospitals in 16 states. In Pennsylvania,Prime hospitals include Philadelphia’s Roxborough Memorial Hospital and Lower Bucks Hospital. Suburban Community Hospital is also part of the Prime system, but it is owned by the company’s nonprofit arm, Prime Healthcare Foundation, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.
The contracts for the roughly 200 nurses who staff Suburban Community Hospital and Lower Bucks Hospital both expired on October 12 , the Inquirer report says.
“We have been negotiating with PASNAP since early September for a new collective bargaining agreement. We are scheduled to meet with the Union again, and we’re hopeful we can come to an agreement soon to continue providing excellent care to our patients without interruption. Unfortunately, rather than focus on bargaining a fair contract for our nurses, the Union has chosen to picket,” said Prime Healthcare Spokeswoman Michelle Aliprantis.
Prime is the only medical facility system in the country to have settled three federal civil cases alleging Medicare fraud in the last six years, Union officials say.
After a long winter, many people are now looking ahead to spring break travel. Whether your plans have you headed to the beach or traveling abroad, GIANT and MARTIN’S pharmacists are available as a resource with pre-travel health consultations and over-the-counter product suggestions.
“The same way you may enlist the expertise of a travel agent when booking your vacation, your local GIANT or MARTIN’S pharmacist also has a wealth of knowledge when it comes to ensuring you have the right vaccinations or health essentials ahead of your trip,” said Nick Koch, director of pharmacy and wellbeing, The GIANT Company. “From pre-health travel consultations to offering recommendations for the best sunscreens and first aid basics, don’t overlook the value that our team of pharmacists can bring to your vacation preparations.”
If your spring break plans have you traveling aboard, GIANT and MARTIN’S pharmacists can also get you adventure ready with a pre-travel health consultation approximately as soon as travel dates are confirmed and a minimum of one month before you leave. This includes vaccines, prescription referrals, and over-the-counter medications.
Vaccines* include but are not limited to yellow fever vaccine (available at select locations), typhoid vaccine and cholera vaccine. Prescription referrals include malaria prevention, traveler’s diarrhea prevention and care, motion sickness prevention and altitude sickness prevention. For more information or to schedule an appointment, visit https://giantfoodstores.com/pages/pharmacy-services.
GIANT and MARTIN’S pharmacists advise that any prescription medication should always be packed in one’s carry-on bag, never in checked luggage, and preferably in the original container with the prescription label affixed. Be sure to bring enough for your trip as well as extra should there be any travel delays.
Travelers are also encouraged to pack a small first aid kit for on-the-go use. This should include bandages of various sizes, gauze pads, antibiotic ointment, hydrocortisone cream, tweezers and a thermometer. Be sure to add over the counter pain relievers, antacids, decongestants, hand sanitizers and antibacterial wipes, too. Additional items may be needed based on one’s destination and weather.
March “comes in as lion” to the Lower Bucks area as the National Weather Service (NWS) issued a winter weather advisory for Tuesday morning forecasting a mixed precipitation event making for possibly slippery road conditions.
The advisory is in effect from 5 a.m. until 11 a.m. Tuesday, March 3.
NWS says total snow accumulations less than one inch and ice accumulations around a light glaze in portions of southeast Pennsylvania and central, northern, and northwest New Jersey.
The hazardous conditions could impact the Tuesday morning commute, officials say, and motorists should plan on slippery road conditions. Motorists are reminded to slow down and use caution while traveling.
Bucks County has issued a “Code Blue” declaration as bitter cold is set to return for the start of March.
Shelters in Upper, Central and Lower Bucks will be in operation nightly Sunday through Tuesday morning.
The following shelters have been activated for this Code Blue event:
Lower Bucks – ahtn.org (3/1)
Calvary Baptist Church – Gym
250 Green Lane
Bristol, PA 19007 www.calvarybristol.org
(3/2)
Morrisville Presbyterian Church
771 N. Pennsylvania Ave.
Morrisville, PA 19067 www.mpcusa.org
Please note the Lower Bucks shelter location changes Monday evening to Morrisville Presbyterian Church.
Guests are required to leave the shelters by 6:45 a.m. each day and may return in the evening
Upper Bucks – facebook.com/upperbuckscodeblue Quakertown Masonic Lodge – First Floor
501 W. Broad Street
Quakertown, PA 18951
Central Bucks – co2ssh.org
St. Paul’s Lutheran Church
301 N. Main Street
Doylestown, PA 18901 www.doylestownlutheran.org
Guests are required to leave the shelters by 6:45 a.m. each day and may return in the evening.
The Upper and Lower Bucks shelters will open at 8:30 p.m. The Central Bucks shelter opens at 7:30 p.m.
The county issues a “Code Blue” declaration when temperatures are forecast to drop below 20 degrees for two or more consecutive days. A “Code Blue” may be called amid higher temperatures, as consideration is also given to wind chill, precipitation and other circumstances.
Information about “Code Blue” openings is available Monday – Friday through the County’s Housing Link Helpline at 1-800-810-4434.