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Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association

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Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association
Basic facts
Type:Industry association
Website:Official website

The Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association represented 70 Massachusetts hospitals on political and legislative matters as of 2018. It opposed Massachusetts Question 1, the Nurse-Patient Assignment Limits Initiative, in November 2018.

History

As of November 2018, the Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association included the following statement on its website:[1]

The Massachusetts Health & Hospital Association (MHA) was founded in 1936, and its members include 70 licensed member hospitals, many of which are organized within 29 member health systems, as well as interested individuals and other healthcare stakeholders. MHA serves as the unified voice for Massachusetts hospitals on Beacon Hill and Capitol Hill.[2]

Political activity

Ballot measure activity

Massachusetts Question 1, Nurse-Patient Assignment Limits Initiative

See also: Massachusetts Question 1, Nurse-Patient Assignment Limits Initiative (2018)

The Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association (MHA) opposed Massachusetts Question 1, the Nurse-Patient Assignment Limits Initiative, which was on the ballot November 6, 2018. The initiative was designed to establish patient assignment limits for registered nurses working in hospitals..

The MHA contributed $18.4 million to the Coalition to Protect Patient Safety, the official campaign opposed to Question 1. The committee argued that enforcing limits on nurse-patient assignments would increase patient wait times and force hospitals to cut back on services. They also argued it would be too expensive for hospitals to hire more nurses, resulting in hospitals closing down.[3]

BW Research Partnership and Mass Insight Global Partnerships study commissioned by the MHA

On April 30, 2018, BW Research Partnership and Mass Insight Global Partnerships released a study commissioned by the MHA titled "Protecting the Best Patient Care in the Country: Local Choices v. Statewide Mandates in Massachusetts," an analysis of the proposed measure which would mandate a certain nurse to patient ratio. The report concluded that the approval of this initiative could cost the healthcare system $1.31 billion in the first year and $900 million annually thereafter due to nurse salaries, wage inflation, and technology. The study also concluded that implementation of the initiative would "reduce quality of care and increase inequality in care provision."[4]

The full study can be read here.

Overview of ballot measure support and opposition

The following table details the Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association's ballot measure stances available on Ballotpedia:

Ballot measure support and opposition for Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association
Ballot measure Year Position Status
Massachusetts Question 1, Nurse-Patient Assignment Limits Initiative 2018 Supported a "no" vote  DefeateddDefeated

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms 'Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association'. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

External links

Footnotes