加州最低护士配备法的劳动力市场效应

THE LABOR MARKET EFFECTS OF CALIFORNIA'S MINIMUM NURSE STAFFING LAW

Health Economics · 2013
被引 16
人大 A-

中文导读

研究了2004年加州实施全州最低护士与患者比例规定后,对注册护士就业和工资的影响,发现该法律未显著增加护士数量或工时,仅对工资有微弱影响。

Abstract

In 2004, California became the first state to implement statewide minimum nurse-to-patient ratios in general hospitals. In spite of years of work to establish statewide staffing regulations, there is little evidence that the law was effective in attracting more nurses to the hospital workforce or improving patient outcomes. This paper examines the effects of this legislation on employment and wages of registered nurses. By using annual financial data from California hospitals, I show that nurse-to-patient ratios in medical/surgical units increased substantially following the staffing mandate. However, survey data from two nationally representative datasets indicate that the law had no effect on the aggregate number of registered nurses or the hours they worked in California hospitals, and at most a modest effect on wages. My findings suggest that offsetting changes in labor demand due to hospital closures, combined with reclassification of workers within hospitals, and mitigated the employment effects of California's staffing regulation. This paper cautions that California's experience with minimum nurse staffing legislation may not be generalizable to states considering similar policies in very different hospital markets.

最低护士配比法护士就业工资效应加州