Nursing home workers did not receive the recognition they deserved prior to this pandemic but they have been bravely providing health care services and support. 7,761 nursing home staff members have contracted COVID19 since this crisis began. #Unioncleveland.com/datacentral/20…
"The state began tracking nursing home cases by facility on April 15. There have been 13,081 patient cases and 7,761 staff cases since then. This is up from 12,529 and 7,484 one week ago."
"This week’s report listed 2,677 deaths for cases since April 15. Separately, the department has said another 369 patient deaths pre-date the start of the more detailed tracking on April 15." #GetMePPE#UnionsForAll
Nursing home workers provide critical health care services but our long-term care system is broken with poor staffing levels, a need for job protections, serious quality care issues, and a lack of protective equipment. seiu1199.org/contact-your-l…
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“NURSING HOME WORKERS face a higher risk for COVID-19 than most Americans, providing essential care in hazardous conditions and at lower pay than they deserve, says David Grabowski, a professor of health care policy at Harvard Medical School.” health.usnews.com/hospital-heroe…
“Giving them a living wage, decent benefits and adequate personal protective equipment is not only the right thing to do, it would help keep long-term care residents safer amid the pandemic, too, he says.”
“Thanks to COVID-19, nursing home workers now have the most dangerous job in America, Grabowski and co-authors declared in a July 28 opinion piece in the Washington Post.”
"Nursing home aides, who provide the bulk of direct care and are on the front lines in the pandemic, have high turnover and low retention related to a range of reasons from low pay to the emotional and physical demands of the job." #UnionsForAlldaytondailynews.com/news/nursing-h…
"Long term care workers now have to limit their conduct in the community, they have to watch everything they do, they have to submit to regular testing, they have to wear PPE all day,” Schwartz said."
"Nursing home worker turnover has long been a challenge in the industry, though the issue has now been underscored and heightened by the pandemic."
"Specifically, health care unions in nursing homes were associated with a 1.29 percentage point mortality reduction, or a 30% relative decrease in COVID-19 mortality compared with nursing homes without organized workforces, the study found." skillednursingnews.com/2020/09/unioni…
“Unions were also associated with greater access to PPE, one mechanism that may link unions to lower COVID-19 mortality rates..."
"Access to PPE is a crucial part of protecting the frontline nursing home workers and the residents for whom they care, and the study found that unionized buildings had better access to some of the most needed items during the COVID-19 pandemic."
President Becky Williams calls on Sen. Huffman to resign, calls remarks “blatantly racist. seiu1199.org/president-beck…
In response to the remarks by Ohio State Senator Steve Huffman (R-Tipp City) about COVID-19 and the Black community, SEIU District 1199 President Becky Williams issued the following statement:
“The comments made by Ohio State Senator Steve Huffman have no place in our society and certainly have no place in the Ohio Senate.” (1/6)
Our experience teaches us that “divide and conquer” strategies are often used to keep working people from coming together to build a better future for all families and race has been one of the most powerful ways to pit working people against one another.
Together in union, people from different places and of different races fight for issues that matter to our families.
No matter where we come from or what we look like, we all deserve an equitable chance to pursue our dreams. At SEIU, we are coming together to reject the politics of hate and division.