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Workshop Talks by Htun Lin
News & Letters, July 2001


HMO leeches

Working at the Kaiser HMO, I sense a major cultural change. Nobody seems to feel like they belong anymore as they walk around with frustrated expressions on their faces. The heart of the operation used to be the admissions office, driving the practical activity of the hospital. We had the sense that our reason for being here was to take in patients from emergency and assign them to the hospital.

Efficiency used to mean how quickly we could get a patient from emergency to a hospital bed staffed by qualified permanent medical staff. After ten years of restructuring, efficiency has taken on a whole new meaning. It now means how few nursing and allied staff can they get away with providing each day.

Because head count flexibility is paramount, we see a revolving door of temporary and casual staff provided by subcontractors and labor agencies. The heart of the operation now is the imperious staffing office. Everyone has to answer to them including the nursing supervisor who now is reduced to no more than an artful accountant and skillful juggler of nurse-to-patient ratios.

Her concrete nursing abilities are no longer primary. Her main job is to keep costs in line by restricting staffing levels within budgetary constraints, predetermined by the bean counters at headquarters. Taylorism has arrived in health care.

We know it is nothing personal against us health workers that makes our employer do this. I don't even think they are lying when they say their pharmaceutical and equipment costs went up with the explosion of high-tech. I think they are telling the truth when they say the large corporate subscribers of group health plans have been pressuring them to cut costs. Not only that, Kaiser feels compelled by cutthroat competition from the for-profit HMOs to abide by "market" standards.

I see this as Kaiser merely responding to what Marx called a new social average labor time. Labor time for a given product averaged over the whole society determines value. That new social average tells them to cut costs because all the employers insist on cutting health care costs for their employees to compensate for their own diminishing profit margins. The pressure is to reduce the cost of labor by cutting the cost of their health care and cutting the number of workers themselves.

Health care workers feel the pressure from both angles. So what Marx called "socially necessary labor time" required to deliver the product, in this case health care, is what drives managers. This drives front line health care workers crazy. We want to really care for our patients and that contradicts the corporate goal of value production.

Our daily tasks are broken down into discrete manageable mathematical units. Each task is assigned a value as is each patient care requirement and each morbidity factor. All of this used to be a tool for the nurses to determine the level of care needed by the patient. Now it is used by staffing administrators to mathematically manipulate these numbers to meet their budgetary constraints.

The bottom line is to get away with the least amount of nursing time, eliminating as much labor as possible. This is done through the use of machines, accompanied by less skilled personnel and also through the promotion of patient "self care" and "home care" techniques. In other words, anything that would "liberate" the nurse from bedside care.

What is especially alienating is that the pressure never stops. Workers implicitly recognize the inner workings of value production and its extraction of surplus value from our labor to satisfy the quest for profits. We have seen them spend a billion dollars on high-tech to replace half our workforce and still come back to us later crying "red ink" and "we need more effort from you."

They call for us to be better "team players," cut costs more, and work faster in order to take on more patients. Because nursing has been so thoroughly abused by managed care's staff reductions and speed-up, now they are unable to attract new applicants into the profession.

We know we are more productive than ever. Our rate of on-the-job injuries, especially bad backs and needle sticks, are proof of this. Yet our employer, like a hapless giant hounding the goose that lays his golden eggs to produce more, never seems to be satisfied.

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