Kaiser Mental Health Workers Launch Statewide Strike
Workers at Kaiser Permanente recently staged what is the largest mental health strike in history over the course of five days. Thousands of workers, at nearly 100 facilities across the state in protest of the healthcare giants continued refusal to provide what the National Union of Healthcare Workers (NUHW) considers to be adequate care. This is not the first time the NUHW has clashed with Kaiser Mental Health. In 2011, Kaiser employees complained to the California Department of Managed Healthcare (DMHC) that understaffing had led to unreasonably long wait times for patients. Following a 15 month investigation, the DHMC fined Kaiser $4 million, and in 2015, workers staged a five-day strike in protest of unchanging conditions, a continuing fight for employee contracts, and the retaliation by Kaiser against prominent whistleblowers.
According to both union officials and picketing workers, the issues that sparked the conflict in 2015, especially those involving understaffing, remain central to last weeks strikes. According to NUHW, the ratio of clinicians to patients at Kaiser is one per 3,000the same disproportionate ratio that existed in 2015. They say they hired more people, but theres a high rate of attrition, says Anne Rose, a behavioral health clinician in Laguna hills. People retire, people leave Kaiser because the workload is so big that a lot of people just dont want to do it . . . What we had hoped for is that Kaiser would follow through on their goal of making Kaiser the best place for mental health care, and we havent seen that happen.
NUHW began negotiations with Kaiser in May but no progress has been made. NUHW president Sal Roselli argues that Kaiser has more than enough money to address their concerns. Kaiser is filthy rich, with over $46 billion cash reserve and investments, Roselli says. They can afford to provide adequate care, and so they should do it.
Last year, Kaiser reported $3.8 billion in profits and $2.9 billion for the first nine months of 2018. The shortage of clinicians has real consequences for Kaiser Permanente patients, which means that new patients often have to wait up to six weeks to meet with a mental health professional, with repeat patients waiting up to 12 weeks.
Read more: https://ocweekly.com/kaiser-mental-health-workers-launch-statewide-strike/