http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-nurses7dec07.story Nurses Decry New TV Spot
Hospital group's ad commends governor's decision to keep the current patient ratio.
By Peter Nicholas
Times Staff Writer
December 7, 2004
SACRAMENTO — Airing across the state, a new television ad features a registered nurse with a stethoscope around her neck, thanking Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger for relaxing nurse staffing levels at California hospitals.
The 30-second spot by the California Healthcare Assn., which represents hospitals and health systems, commends Schwarzenegger "on behalf of nurses, doctors and other caregivers who treat patients every day…."
With the state's nursing shortage, higher staffing levels would be tough to sustain, burdening hospitals with more expense and less flexibility in treating patients, according to advocates of the rule change.
But thousands of nurses, far from grateful to the governor as the ad suggests, are mounting an aggressive and personal campaign against his decision to relieve hospitals of a requirement that would lower patient-nurse ratios beginning in January. They contend the ad is deceptive, mischaracterizing the true feelings of nurses.
Today, nurses were planning to march in protest of a speech that the governor is to give in Long Beach at a women's conference led by his wife, Maria Shriver. About 2,500 nurses gathered at the Capitol last week, waving signs in protest of Schwarzenegger's action. It was one of the largest demonstrations against Schwarzenegger since his election last year.
Noting that women dominate the nursing profession, union advocates contend the governor's policy would create tougher working conditions for women — at a time when he is portraying himself as a champion of women's interests. In a sign of the visceral tone of the campaign, nurses are invoking allegations that the governor groped women in years past, using the slogan: "Hands off our ratios."
"They're running these ads attempting to act like the registered nurse speaks for the profession, when there's not a nurse in the state of California that supports the governor's actions on this," said Rose Ann DeMoro, executive director of the California Nurses Assn. The group represents about 58,000 of the state's approximately 300,000 registered nurses. "It's absolutely deceptive."<snip>