Nurses in New York City reach agreement and end strike; hospitals benefiting from volunteer staff may be breaking labor laws; most lingering COVID symptoms will heal on its own, study finds.
New York City Nursing Strike Ends After 3 Days
A nursing strike at 2 of New York City’s’s largest hospitals, Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx, and Mount Sinai Hospital in upper Manhattan, has ended after 3 days, according to CBS News. Both hospitals announced that they had reached tentative agreements with the New York State Nurses Association, in what the union called “historic.” According to the union, the nurses “won concreate enforceable safe staffing ratios in both deals and will be back on the job starting this morning.”
Hospitals May Be Skirting Labor Laws With Use of Volunteer Staff
US hospitals benefit from potentially more than $5 billion in free volunteer labor annually, according to a Kaiser Health News (KHN) analysis of data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Independent Sector. KHN cited labor experts who said using “hospital volunteers, particularly at for-profit institutions, provides an opportunity for facilities to run afoul of federal rules, create exploitative arrangements, and deprive employees of paid work amid a larger fight for fair wages.” The role that volunteers play in the day-today functioning of many health systems became visible during the height of COVID-19, when facilities shut their doors to nearly all but paid staff; even when vaccines launched, many volunteers did not return, KHN said.
Lingering COVID-19 Symptoms Ease Over Time, Study Finds
Shortness of breath, loss of taste and smell, and other lingering COVID-19 symptoms may ease within a year, according to NBC News. Although symptoms of long COVID may often be scary and debilitating, research by KI Research Institute and Maccabi Healthcare Services in Israel found that the majority of people with these symptoms will naturally get better over time. While this may come as encouraging news for many, it is clear that some patients continue to suffer after a year of infection, and it also isn’t known how many people are affected.
COVID-19 Linked to Increased Kidney Risks in Children
April 11th 2025Pediatric patients with prior SARS-CoV-2 infection had a higher risk of adverse postacute kidney outcomes, such as new-onset chronic kidney disease (CKD) and declining kidney function, if they had preexisting CKD or acute kidney injury.
Read More
Survey Finds Slow Start on CMS Interoperability Rule Implementation
April 10th 2025With deadlines looming in 2026 and 2027 for compliance with the CMS Advancing Interoperability and Improving Prior Authorization Final Rule, a survey indicates a concerning lack of readiness among payers and providers to meet the new requirements for data sharing.
Read More
Collaborative Care Model Offers Success in Reducing Suicide Risk, New Report Finds
April 10th 2025A report published today by Shatterproof and The Bowman Family Foundation underscores the potential of the collaborative care model to lower suicide risk across diverse patient populations and health systems.
Read More
NCCN Data Find Racial, Socioeconomic Disparities in Quality of Care for Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer
April 9th 2025New data from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) reveal that socially vulnerable and minority patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer are less likely to receive recommended treatments and achieve longer survival.
Read More