AMERICAN SPEEDUP
Kaplan discusses how recession resulted in a work pileup. Some of the job's intensity is due to broad national trends in healthcare. The rise of HMOs and cost-cutting in the 1990s mean patients who are stable and ambulatory--some nurses call them "walkie-talkies"--are now quickly rele...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Nation (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2014-11, Vol.299 (20), p.28 |
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description | Kaplan discusses how recession resulted in a work pileup. Some of the job's intensity is due to broad national trends in healthcare. The rise of HMOs and cost-cutting in the 1990s mean patients who are stable and ambulatory--some nurses call them "walkie-talkies"--are now quickly released, so those left in the hospital tend to be sicker and harder to care for. A 2013 survey of its own union reps by the United Steelworkers, which represents such blue-collar industries as oil and steel, found that production pressures, the increased pace of work and increased workloads topped workplace health concerns--outstripping more obvious risks such as poorly maintained equipment. When the reps were asked to give an example of a health or safety problem that had gotten worse over the past year, understaffing led the list. The jobless recovery, in other words, is sustained in part by aggressively overworking those with jobs. |
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issn | 0027-8378 2472-5897 |
language | eng |
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source | Political Science Complete |
subjects | Occupational health Recessions Risk factors Workloads |
title | AMERICAN SPEEDUP |
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