as introduced - 92nd Legislature (2021 - 2022) Posted on 04/24/2022 04:12pm
A bill for an act
relating to health; requiring hospital core staffing plans; requiring hospital staffing
studies; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2020, sections 144.55,
subdivision 6; 144.653, subdivision 5; 144.7055; 144.7067, by adding a subdivision;
144A.53, subdivision 2; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 144.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
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This act shall be known as "The Keeping Nurses at the Bedside Act."
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Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 144.55, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
(a) The commissioner may
refuse to grant or renew, or may suspend or revoke, a license on any of the following grounds:
(1) violation of any of the provisions of sections 144.50 to 144.56 or the rules or standards
issued pursuant thereto, or Minnesota Rules, chapters 4650 and 4675;
(2) permitting, aiding, or abetting the commission of any illegal act in the institution;
(3) conduct or practices detrimental to the welfare of the patient; deleted text beginor
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(4) obtaining or attempting to obtain a license by fraud or misrepresentation; deleted text beginor
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(5) with respect to hospitals and outpatient surgical centers, if the commissioner
determines that there is a pattern of conduct that one or more physicians or advanced practice
registered nurses who have a "financial or economic interest," as defined in section 144.6521,
subdivision 3, in the hospital or outpatient surgical center, have not provided the notice and
disclosure of the financial or economic interest required by section 144.6521deleted text begin.deleted text endnew text begin; or
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(6) with respect to hospitals, if after a recommendation from the director of the Office
of Health Facility Complaints, the commissioner determines that there is a pattern of the
hospital failing to comply with the hospital's core staffing plans as required under sections
144.7051 to 144.7059.
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(b) The commissioner shall not renew a license for a boarding care bed in a resident
room with more than four beds.
Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 144.653, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Whenever a duly authorized representative of the state
commissioner of health finds upon inspection of a facility required to be licensed under the
provisions of sections 144.50 to 144.58 that the licensee of such facility is not in compliance
with sections 144.411 to 144.417, 144.50 to 144.58, 144.651,new text begin 144.7051 to 144.7059,new text end or
626.557, or the applicable rules promulgated under those sections, a correction order shall
be issued to the licensee. The correction order shall state the deficiency, cite the specific
rule violated, and specify the time allowed for correction.
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For the purposes of sections 144.7051 to 144.7059, the
terms defined in this section have the meanings given.
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"Commissioner" means the commissioner of health.
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"Daily staffing schedule" means the actual number
of full-time equivalent nonmanagerial care staff assigned to an inpatient care unit and
providing care in that unit during a 24-hour period and the actual number of patients assigned
to each direct care registered nurse present and providing care in the unit.
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"Direct care registered nurse" means a registered
nurse, as defined in section 148.171, subdivision 20, who is nonsupervisory and
nonmanagerial and who directly provides nursing care to patients more than 60 percent of
the time.
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"Hospital" means any setting that is licensed under this chapter as a
hospital.
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This section is effective July 1, 2024.
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Each hospital must establish
and maintain a functioning hospital nurse staffing committee. A hospital may assign the
functions and duties of a hospital nurse staffing committee to an existing committee, provided
the existing committee meets the membership requirements applicable to a hospital nurse
staffing committee.
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(a) At least 60 percent of the committee's membership
must be direct care registered nurses. Direct care registered nurses who are members of a
collective bargaining unit shall be appointed or elected to the committee according to the
guidelines of the applicable collective bargaining agreement. If there is no collective
bargaining agreement, direct care registered nurses shall be elected to the committee by
direct care registered nurses employed by the hospital.
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(b) The hospital shall appoint no more than 40 percent of the committee's membership.
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A hospital must treat participation in committee meetings by
any hospital employee as scheduled work time and compensate each committee member at
the employee's existing rate of pay. A hospital must relieve all direct care registered nurse
members of the hospital nurse staffing committee of other work duties during the times at
which the committee meets.
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Each hospital nurse staffing committee must meet at least
quarterly.
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(a) Each hospital nurse staffing committee shall create,
implement, continuously evaluate, and update as needed evidence-based written core staffing
plans to guide the creation of daily staffing schedules for each inpatient care unit of the
hospital.
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(b) Each hospital nurse staffing committee must:
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(1) establish a secure and anonymous method for any hospital employee or patient to
submit directly to the committee any concerns related to safe staffing;
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(2) review each concern related to safe staffing submitted directly to the committee;
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(3) review the documentation of compliance maintained by the hospital under section
144.7056, subdivision 5;
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(4) review each concern for safe staffing form forwarded to it by the commissioner;
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(5) conduct a trend analysis of the data related to all reported concerns regarding safe
staffing;
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(6) develop a mechanism for tracking and analyzing staffing trends within the hospital;
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(7) submit to the Office of Health Facility Complaints a nurse staffing report;
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(8) assist the commissioner in conducting surveys of nonmanagerial care staff by
facilitating and encouraging participation in the surveys of a representative sample of direct
care registered nurses employed by the hospital; and
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(9) record in the committee minutes for each meeting a summary of the discussions and
recommendations of the committee. Each committee must maintain the minutes, records,
and distributed materials for five years.
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This section is effective July 1, 2024.
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Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 144.7055, is amended to read:
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(a) For the purposes of this section, the following terms have
the meanings given.
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deleted text begin (b)deleted text endnew text begin (a)new text end "Core staffing plan" means deleted text beginthe projected number of full-time equivalent
nonmanagerial care staff that will be assigned in a 24-hour period to an inpatient care unitdeleted text endnew text begin
a plan described in subdivision 2new text end.
deleted text begin (c)deleted text endnew text begin (b)new text end "Nonmanagerial care staff" means registered nurses, licensed practical nurses,
and other health care workers, which may include but is not limited to nursing assistants,
nursing aides, patient care technicians, and patient care assistants, who perform
nonmanagerial direct patient care functions for more than 50 percent of their scheduled
hours on a given patient care unit.
deleted text begin (d)deleted text endnew text begin (c)new text end "Inpatient care unit"new text begin or "unit"new text end means a designated inpatient area for assigning
patients and staff for which a deleted text begindistinct staffing plandeleted text endnew text begin daily staffing schedulenew text end exists and that
operates 24 hours per day, seven days per week in a hospital setting. Inpatient care unit does
not include any hospital-based clinic, long-term care facility, or outpatient hospital
department.
deleted text begin (e)deleted text endnew text begin (d)new text end "Staffing hours per patient day" means the number of full-time equivalent
nonmanagerial care staff who will ordinarily be assigned to provide direct patient care
divided by the expected average number of patients upon which such assignments are based.
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(f) "Patient acuity tool" means a system for measuring an individual patient's need for
nursing care. This includes utilizing a professional registered nursing assessment of patient
condition to assess staffing need.
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(a) The deleted text beginchief nursing executive or nursing
designeedeleted text endnew text begin hospital nurse staffing committeenew text end of every deleted text beginreportingdeleted text end hospital deleted text beginin Minnesota under
section 144.50 willdeleted text endnew text begin mustnew text end develop a core staffing plan for each deleted text beginpatientdeleted text endnew text begin inpatientnew text end care unit.
(b) Core staffing plans deleted text beginshalldeleted text endnew text begin mustnew text end specifynew text begin all of the following:
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new text begin (1) new text endthenew text begin projected number ofnew text end full-time equivalent deleted text beginfordeleted text endnew text begin nonmanagerial care staff that will
be assigned in a 24-hour period tonew text end each deleted text beginpatientdeleted text endnew text begin inpatientnew text end care unit deleted text beginfor each 24-hour period.deleted text endnew text begin;
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(2) the maximum number of patients on each inpatient care unit for whom a direct care
nurse can typically safely care;
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(3) criteria for determining when circumstances exist on each inpatient care unit such
that a direct care nurse cannot safely care for the typical number of patients and when
assigning a lower number of patients to each nurse on the inpatient unit would be appropriate;
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(4) a procedure for each inpatient care unit to make shift-to-shift adjustments in staffing
levels when such adjustments are required by patient acuity and nursing intensity in the
unit;
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(5) a contingency plan for each inpatient unit to safely address circumstances in which
patient care needs unexpectedly exceed the staffing resources provided for in a daily staffing
schedule. A contingency plan must include a method to quickly identify for each daily
staffing schedule additional direct care registered nurses who are available to provide direct
care on the inpatient care unit; and
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(6) strategies to enable direct care registered nurses to take breaks to which they are
entitled under law or under an applicable collective bargaining agreement.
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(c) new text beginCore staffing plans must ensure that:
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(1) the person creating a daily staffing schedule has sufficiently detailed information to
create a daily staffing schedule that meets the requirements of the plan;
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(2) daily staffing nurse schedules do not rely on assigning individual nonmanagerial
care staff to work overtime hours in excess of 16 hours in a 24-hour period or to work
consecutive 24-hour periods requiring 16 or more hours;
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(3) a direct care registered nurse is not required or expected to perform functions outside
the nurse's professional license;
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(4) light duty direct care registered nurses are given appropriate assignments; and
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(5) daily staffing schedules do not interfere with applicable collective bargaining
agreements.
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new text begin(a) new text endPrior to deleted text beginsubmittingdeleted text endnew text begin
completing or updatingnew text end the core staffing plan, deleted text beginas required in subdivision 3, hospitals shalldeleted text endnew text begin
a hospital nurse staffing committee mustnew text end consult with representatives of the hospital medical
staff, managerial and nonmanagerial care staff, and other relevant hospital personnel about
the core staffing plan and the expected average number of patients upon which thenew text begin corenew text end
staffing plan is based.
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(b) When developing a core staffing plan, a hospital nurse staffing committee must
consider all of the following:
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(1) the individual needs and expected census of each inpatient care unit;
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(2) unit-specific patient acuity, including fall risk and behaviors requiring intervention,
such as physical aggression toward self or others, or destruction of property;
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(3) unit-specific demands on direct care registered nurses' time, including: frequency of
admissions, discharges, and transfers; frequency and complexity of patient evaluations and
assessments; frequency and complexity of nursing care planning; planning for patient
discharge; assessing for patient referral; patient education; and implementing infectious
disease protocols;
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(4) the architecture and geography of the inpatient care unit, including the placement of
patient rooms, treatment areas, nursing stations, medication preparation areas, and equipment;
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(5) mechanisms and procedures to provide for one-to-one patient observation for patients
on psychiatric or other units;
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(6) the stress under which direct care nurses are placed when required to work extreme
amounts of overtime, such as shifts in excess of 12 hours or multiple consecutive double
shifts;
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(7) the need for specialized equipment and technology on the unit;
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(8) other special characteristics of the unit or community patient population, including
age, cultural and linguistic diversity and needs, functional ability, communication skills,
and other relevant social and socioeconomic factors;
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(9) the skill mix of personnel other than direct care registered nurses providing or
supporting direct patient care on the unit;
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(10) mechanisms and procedures for identifying additional registered nurses who are
available for direct patient care when patients' unexpected needs exceed the planned workload
for direct care staff; and
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(11) demands on direct care registered nurses' time not directly related to providing
direct care on a unit, such as involvement in quality improvement activities, professional
development, service to the hospital, including serving on the hospital nurse staffing
committee, and service to the profession.
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deleted text begin(a) Hospitalsdeleted text endnew text begin
Each hospitalnew text end must submit the core staffing plansnew text begin approved by the hospital's nurse staffing
committeenew text end to the Minnesota Hospital Association deleted text beginby January 1, 2014deleted text end. The Minnesota
Hospital Association shall include each deleted text beginreportingdeleted text end hospital's core staffing deleted text beginplandeleted text endnew text begin plansnew text end on the
Minnesota Hospital Association's Minnesota Hospital Quality Report website deleted text beginby April 1,
2014deleted text end. new text beginHospitals shall submit to the Minnesota Hospital Association new text endany substantial deleted text beginchangesdeleted text endnew text begin
updatesnew text end to deleted text beginthedeleted text endnew text begin anew text end core staffing plan deleted text beginshall be updateddeleted text end within 30 daysnew text begin of the approval of the
updates by the hospital's nurse staffing committee or of amendment through arbitration.
The Minnesota Hospital Association shall update the Minnesota Hospital Quality Report
website with the updated core staffing plans within 30 days of receipt of the updated plannew text end.
deleted text begin(b)deleted text end The Minnesota
Hospital Association shall include on its website for each reporting hospital on a quarterly
basis the actual direct patient care hours per patient and per unit. Hospitals must submit the
direct patient care report to the Minnesota Hospital Association deleted text beginby July 1, 2014, anddeleted text end quarterly
deleted text begin thereafterdeleted text end.
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The Minnesota Hospital
Association shall include on its website for public inspection a list by reporting hospital of
any civil penalties, administrative actions, license suspensions, or license revocations
imposed by the commissioner for violations of a requirement under sections 144.7051 to
144.7059.
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Each hospital
must submit the core staffing plans and any updates to the commissioner on the same
schedule described in subdivision 3.
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This section is effective July 1, 2024.
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A hospital must implement the core
staffing plans approved by a majority vote of the hospital nurse staffing committee.
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A hospital must post the core staffing
plan for the inpatient care unit in a public area on the unit.
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For each publicly posted core staffing
plan, a hospital must post a notice stating whether the current staffing on the unit complies
with the hospital's core staffing plan for that unit. The public notice of compliance must
include a list of the number of nonmanagerial care staff working on the unit during the
current shift and the number of patients assigned to each direct care registered nurse working
on the unit during the current shift. The list must enumerate the nonmanagerial care staff
by health care worker type. The public notice of compliance must be posted immediately
adjacent to the publicly posted core staffing plan.
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(a) A
hospital must include with the posted materials described in subdivisions 2 and 3, a statement
that individual copies of the posted materials are available upon request to any patient on
the unit or to any visitor of a patient on the unit. The statement must include specific
instructions for obtaining copies of the posted materials.
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(b) A hospital must, within four hours after the request, provide individual copies of all
the posted materials described in subdivisions 2 and 3 to any patient on the unit or to any
visitor of a patient on the unit who requests the materials.
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Each hospital must document compliance with
its core nursing plans and maintain records demonstrating compliance for each inpatient
care unit for five years. Each hospital must provide to its nurse staffing committee access
to all documentation required under this subdivision.
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(a) If hospital management objects to a core staffing plan
approved by a majority vote of the hospital nurse staffing committee, the hospital may elect
to attempt to amend the core staffing plan through arbitration. The arbitration process must
include testimony on the potential impact of changes to the core staffing plan from a
representative of the Minnesota Department of Health who has experience with licensing
and compliance survey inspections of health care facilities and from a representative of the
Board of Nursing with expertise in nurse licensure who can describe the circumstances
under which a nurse's license can be put at risk when a nurse accepts a patient assignment
that the nurse believes is unsafe.
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(b) During an ongoing dispute resolution process, a hospital must continue to implement
the core staffing plan as written and approved by the hospital nurse staffing committee.
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(c) If the dispute resolution process results in an amendment to the core staffing plan,
the hospital must implement the amended core staffing plan.
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This section is effective October 1, 2024.
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If a hospital fails to submit
to the commissioner a substantially complete nurse staffing report within 60 days of the
end of a quarter, the Office of Health Facility Complaints shall impose a fine of $5,000.
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(a) The commissioner must
maintain a secure online portal for the submission by hospital employees of anonymous
reports of unsafe staffing conditions in any hospital.
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(b) Upon receipt of a report of unsafe staffing conditions, the commissioner shall forward
the report to the Office of Health Facility Complaints for investigation, to the hospital nurse
staffing committee of the hospital that is the subject of the report, and to any collective
bargaining agent representing the licensed registered nurses employed by the hospital that
is the subject of the report.
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(a) The director of the
Office of Health Facility Complaints shall investigate under section 144A.53 all reports of
unsafe staffing conditions. If the director determines that an inpatient care unit identified
in a complaint was not in compliance with its core staffing plan on the date identified in the
complaint or is not in compliance during an onsite investigation, the director must issue a
correction order under section 144.653.
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(b) If upon reinspection the director finds that the hospital has not corrected deficiencies
specified in the correction order, a notice of noncompliance with a correction order shall
be issued stating all deficiencies not corrected. Notwithstanding section 144.653, subdivision
6, unless a hearing is requested under section 144.653, subdivision 8, the hospital shall
forfeit to the state, within 15 days after receipt by the hospital of a notice of noncompliance
with a correction order, $1,000 for each inpatient care unit out of compliance with its core
staffing plan for that unit.
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(c) If after a second reinspection, the director finds that the hospital has not brought an
inpatient care unit into compliance with its core staffing plan, the hospital must forfeit to
the state $5,000 per day since the previous reinspection for each inpatient care unit that
remains out of compliance with its core staffing plan.
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(d) If after a third reinspection, the director finds that the hospital has not brought an
inpatient care unit into compliance with its core staffing plan, the director shall recommend
to the commissioner that the commissioner suspend the license of the hospital under section
144.55.
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(e) All forfeitures under this section shall be paid into the general fund.
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If, upon review of quarterly
nurse staffing reports submitted to the Office of Health Facility Complaints under section
144.7058, the director determines that there is a pattern of the hospital failing to comply
with the hospital's core staffing plans, the director may open an investigation. An
investigation under this subdivision is subject to the requirements of subdivision 3.
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This section is effective January 1, 2025.
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Each hospital nurse staffing committee
must submit quarterly nurse staffing reports to the Office of Health Facility Complaints.
Reports must be submitted within 60 days of the end of the quarter.
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Nurse staffing reports submitted to the Office of Health
Facility Complaints by a hospital nurse staffing committee must:
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(1) identify any suspected incidents of the hospital failing during the reporting quarter
to meet the standards of one of its core staffing plans;
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(2) identify problems of insufficient staffing, including but not limited to:
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(i) inappropriate number of direct care registered nurses scheduled in a unit;
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(ii) inappropriate number of direct care registered nurses present and delivering care in
a unit;
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(iii) inappropriately experienced direct care registered nurses scheduled for a particular
unit;
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(iv) inappropriately experienced direct care registered nurses present and delivering care
in a unit;
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(v) inability for nurse supervisors to adjust daily nursing schedules for increased patient
acuity or nursing intensity in a unit; and
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(vi) chronically unfilled direct care positions within the hospital;
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(3) identify any units that pose a risk to patient safety due to inadequate staffing;
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(4) propose solutions to solve insufficient staffing;
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(5) propose solutions to reduce risks to patient safety in inadequately staffed units; and
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(6) describe staffing trends within the hospital.
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The Office of Health Facility
Complaints shall include on its website each quarterly nurse staffing report submitted to
the office under subdivision 1.
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The Office of Health Facility Complaints
shall include on its website for public inspection a list, by reporting hospital, of any civil
penalties, administrative actions, license suspensions, or license revocations imposed by
the commissioner for violations of a requirement under sections 144.7051 to 144.7059.
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The commissioner shall develop and provide to each
hospital nurse staffing committee a uniform format or standard form the committee must
use to comply with the nurse staffing reporting requirements under this section. The format
or form developed by the commissioner must present the reported information in a manner
allowing patients and the public to clearly understand and compare staffing patterns and
actual levels of staffing across reporting hospitals. The commissioner must include in the
uniform format or on the standardized form space to allow the reporting hospital to include
a description of additional resources available to support unit level patient care and a
description of the hospital.
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This section is effective October 1, 2024.
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Neither a hospital nor the Board of Nursing may retaliate against or discipline a direct
care registered nurse, either formally or informally, for:
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(1) challenging the process by which a hospital nurse staffing committee is formed or
conducts its business;
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(2) challenging a core staffing plan approved by a hospital nurse staffing committee;
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(3) objecting to or submitting a grievance related to a patient assignment that leads to a
direct care registered nurse violating medical restrictions recommended by the nurse's
medical provider; or
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(4) submitting a report of unsafe staffing conditions.
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This section is effective July 1, 2024.
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Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 144.7067, is amended by adding a subdivision
to read:
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The commissioner shall:
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(1) analyze adverse event reports, nurse staffing reports submitted to the Office of Health
Facility Complaints under section 144.7058, and reports of unsafe staffing conditions
submitted to the Office of Health Facility Complaints under section 144.7057 to determine
correlations between demonstrable understaffing and adverse events and to identify patterns
of systematic understaffing in hospitals;
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(2) communicate to individual hospitals the commissioner's conclusions, if any, regarding
a correlation between adverse events reported in the hospital and understaffing demonstrated
by submitted nurse staffing reports or investigations by the director of the Office of Health
Facility Complaints;
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(3) communicate with relevant hospitals any recommendations for corrective action
resulting from the commissioner's analysis conducted under clause 1; and
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(4) publish an annual report:
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(i) describing, by hospital, correlations between adverse events and demonstrable
understaffing;
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(ii) outlining, in aggregate, corrective action plans and the findings of root cause analyses
regarding understaffing in hospitals; and
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(iii) making recommendations for modifications of the regulation of care provided in
hospitals.
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This section is effective January 1, 2026.
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Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 144A.53, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
(a) The director may receive a complaint from any source
concerning an action of an administrative agency, a health care provider, a home care
provider, a residential care home, or a health facility. The director may require a complainant
to pursue other remedies or channels of complaint open to the complainant before accepting
or investigating the complaint. Investigators are required to interview at least one family
member of the vulnerable adult identified in the complaint. If the vulnerable adult is directing
his or her own care and does not want the investigator to contact the family, this information
must be documented in the investigative file.
(b) The director shall keep written records of all complaints and any action upon them.
After completing an investigation of a complaint, the director shall inform the complainant,
the administrative agency having jurisdiction over the subject matter, the health care provider,
the home care provider, the residential care home, and the health facility of the action taken.
Complainants must be provided a copy of the public report upon completion of the
investigation.
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(c) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), for complaints arising from a report of unsafe staffing
conditions in a hospital under section 144.7057, the director must not require a complainant
to pursue other remedies or channels of complaint open to the complainant before accepting
or investigating the complaint, and investigators are not required to interview at least one
family member of a vulnerable adult identified in the complaint. Within 30 days of receipt
of a report of unsafe staffing conditions in a hospital under section 144.7057, the director
must conduct an onsite complaint investigation to determine if the inpatient care unit
identified in the complaint was in compliance with its core staffing plan on the date identified
in the complaint and whether the unit is in compliance during the onsite investigation.
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The commissioner of health shall expand the commissioner's existing license renewal
questionnaires authorized under Minnesota Statutes, sections 144.051 and 144.052, to
include the collection, analysis, and reporting of data on the following topics:
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(1) Minnesota's supply of active licensed registered nurses;
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(2) trends in Minnesota regarding retention by hospitals of licensed registered nurses;
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(3) reasons licensed registered nurses are leaving direct care positions at hospitals; and
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(4) reasons licensed registered nurses are choosing not to renew their licenses and leaving
the profession.
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(a) By July 1, 2024, each hospital must establish and convene a hospital nurse staffing
committee as described under Minnesota Statutes, section 144.7053.
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(b) By October 1, 2024, each hospital must implement core staffing plans developed by
its hospital nurse staffing committee and satisfy the plan posting requirements under
Minnesota Statutes, section 144.7056.
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(c) By October 1, 2024, each hospital must submit to the Office of Health Facility
Complaints core staffing plans meeting the requirements of Minnesota Statutes, section
144.7055. The commissioner of health must not renew the hospital license of any hospital
that does not submit its core staffing plans by October 1, 2024, until the hospital submits
the plan.
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(d) By October 1, 2024, the commissioner of health must develop and deploy a secure
online portal for the submission by hospital employees of anonymous reports of unsafe
staffing conditions. The commissioner must model the report form available through the
portal on the Minnesota Nurses Association's concern for safe staffing form.
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(e) By December 31, 2024, the commissioner of health must provide electronic access
to the uniform format or standard form for nurse staffing reporting described under Minnesota
Statutes, section 144.7058, subdivision 5.
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$....... in fiscal year 2023 is appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner of
health for the development and implementation of an online portal for the submission by
hospital employees of anonymous reports of unsafe staffing conditions in licensed hospitals.
This is a onetime appropriation and is available until June 30, 2025.
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$....... in fiscal year 2023 is appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner of
health for the investigative duties described in Minnesota Statutes, section 144A.53,
subdivision 2, paragraph (c). The general fund base for this appropriation is $....... in fiscal
year 2024 and $....... in fiscal year 2025.
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$....... in fiscal year 2023 is appropriated to the commissioner of health for the hospital
staffing study authorized under Minnesota Statutes, section 144.7067, subdivision 4. The
general fund base for this appropriation is $....... in fiscal year 2024 and $....... in fiscal year
2025.
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In Minnesota Statutes, section 144.7055, the revisor shall renumber paragraphs (b) to
(e) alphabetically as individual subdivisions under Minnesota Statutes, section 144.7051.
The revisor shall make any necessary changes to sentence structure for this renumbering
while preserving the meaning of the text. The revisor shall also make necessary
cross-reference changes in Minnesota Statutes and Minnesota Rules consistent with the
renumbering.
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