01/14/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/14/2025 05:49
Thousands of registered nurse members of National Nurses United (NNU) will hold actions, including marches, protests, and rallies, on Thursday, Jan. 16 to demand the hospital industry ensure safe staffing levels and patient safeguards amidst the rapid introduction of artificial intelligence technologies.
More than 100,000 NNU members are entering contract negotiations with their employers, including multibillion-dollar health care organizations such as UCHealth and Dignity Health. In negotiations, nurses plan to confront industry decisions that undermine patients' health and well-being and fail to address chronic RN recruitment and retention issues - in favor of increasing profits.
"Today, nurses across the country are taking to the streets to let our communities know that in 2025, as in all years past, we are committed to providing the highest quality of care for every patient," said Nancy Hagans, RN and a president of NNU. "We will fight fearlessly against the profit-driven hospital industry, which seeks to undermine nursing care through unconscionable understaffing and reckless automation."
National Nurses United (NNU) is the largest and fastest-growing union in the United States with nearly 225,000 members nationwide. The nationwide protests - including marches in Washington, D.C.; El Paso, Texas; and across California - will highlight broad support among nurses for solutions that prioritize quality patient care over profits.
See here for a detailed list of actions on Jan. 16. Coverage can be found on NNU's social accounts.
Nurses say solutions, such as mandated nurse-to-patient ratios and guaranteed workplace violence prevention plans, will help address the hospital staffing crisis by returning nurses to the bedside. A new, detailed analysis from NNU, using the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the National Council of State Boards of Nursing, shows that nationwide, there are more than a million registered nurses with active licenses who are choosing not to work at the bedside because of the hospital industry's unsafe working conditions.
Hagans, RN continued, "Patient advocacy is at the core of what we do as nurses. That's why we're demanding safe staffing and protections against untested technologies such as A.I. We see the harm that these cost-cutting schemes cause our patients on a daily basis."
In 2024, NNU released its Guiding Principles for A.I. implementation that promotes quality patient care, safety, and equity. Based on member reports from around the country, NNU has shared its deep concerns with the current implementation of A.I. with hospital employers, policy regulators, and the public.
In fact, a widely-circulated 2024 NNU survey of more than 2,300 registered nurses and members of NNU found that 60 percent of respondents disagreed with the statement, "I trust my employer will implement A.I. with patient safety as the first priority." The same survey found nurses repeatedly reported that their own assessments of patients did not match assessments from A.I. technology deployed in their facilities.
For decades prior to the introduction of A.I. technology in hospital settings, NNU nurses have fought back against employer efforts to deploy unproven technology to deskill, speed up, and replace their work. Through collective action and collective bargaining agreements, they have won technology protections designed to safeguard patients and the nursing profession - with the latest example across HCA facilities.
See here for a detailed list of actions on Jan. 16. Media outlets have permission to use all videos and photos from National Nurses United social media feeds with credit to National Nurses United. Live coverage can be found at: