Thursday, December 31, 2020

2,900 Healthcare deaths

 As we end this year, this report from Kaiser Health News, shows over 2,900 healthcare workers have died from #covid19 in the US this year. It details the role that the lack of adequate PPE has played. 

2020 was the Year of the Nurse, but there was no celebrating for our frontline healthcare workers. 

They don’t want accalades, they don’t want to be heroes. They want to help people and then go home safely to their families. Oh, and they’d like to be able to do that at the end of their scheduled shift, not after yet another mandated 16 hour shift, due to chronic understaffing. 

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/health/more-than-2900-health-care-workers-died-this-year-and-the-government-barely-kept-track?fbclid=IwAR03U9Q-bSrl9JMWjlYGs3Bb_p9FNVho_HiJbuLokcsXziliCfymB7VUWSI

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Corona Virus Update 12/23

 Hospitalizations remain stable, 1,155 statewide. Positive test rate today was 6.1%, also stable. We’ve lost 5,735 CT residents to Covid. 

Vaccinations have begun, with healthcare workers going first, leading the fight against this pandemic as they have all year. I’m including pics of 2 Presidents, Sherri Dayton and Heather Howlett rolling up their sleeves. We’ve also posted on FB and Twitter. Please keep these pictures coming. 

I’m also including a vacination update which I’ll share as I get them on the Vaccine Advisory Subcommittee, and some info on phase 1a. 

I also want to congratulate and celebrate Dr Miguel Cardona, who was selected by President elect Biden to be our next Secretary of Education. Dr Cardona was previously a 4th grade teacher and AFT CT member in Meridian. 

On behalf of Jan, David and the AFT CT Executive Committee I want to thank you all for everything you did this year. It’s been a tough one! Happy Holidays and Happy New Year. 

John








Sunday, December 13, 2020

Rolling up my sleeve

 To vaccinate or not to vaccinate, that is the question.

The first thing I want to say is that when the vaccine is offered to me, I will roll up my sleeve and get in line.

However, it is a question I have been getting asked by reporters and a question I have been discussing with Healthcare members in Connecticut and around the country, and a question we have been discussing on the Governor’s communications vaccine subcommittee.

There are concerns in the public and within the healthcare community about when one should get the vaccine. These concerns are understandable and must be validated and addressed. The reasons are many, from historical distrust by communities of color who have been victims of government experiments to the speed of the vaccine development.
I understand these concerns and it will take time for all people to feel comfortable and we should give them this time.

I believe it is vital that trusted members of communities, such as healthcare professionals, pastors, union leaders and others, who feel ready to be vaccinated, be willing to do so in a public way. I believe that this will help others become ready (in their own time) for the vaccine.
I also believe that when the public sees doctors, nurses, and other healthcare providers being vaccinated, they will feel more comfortable. 
These heroes have seen the worst of the pandemic.
For months upon months they have dealt with the daily death and destruction, they have held hands when family could not be present. 
They have become ill themselves and brought it home to their families.
It has taken an enormous toll on them.

As a retired nurse and a healthcare union leader, my responsibility is to do everything I can to help them, and not ask them to do something I will not do.

So, I will roll up my sleeve and receive my vacination as soon as it is made available to me, hoping for an eventual end to this pandemic.

Be well.

Saturday, December 5, 2020

Corona Virus update 12/5

 Our numbers are “mixed”, I guess, this week.

Hospitalizations across CT are up to 1,150. However, that is a slight drop from earlier this week.
Positive test rates yesterday were 5.5%, not good, but better than the 7.1% and 6.5% of the previous 2 days. 
Close monitoring of the numbers will be important.

After several discussions with AFT CT local leaders about the strain the pandemic is taking on our healthcare workers, we’ve decided to have a zoom social hour for healthcare local presidents on Wednesday night. 
Our Local Leaders often hold down a full time job as Healthcare Professionals AND lead their unions in addition to that. It is a workload and pressure that perhaps only they can appreciate.
It’s been a long time since we could be together and just vent about our common frustrations and issues that we share as healthcare leaders. We won’t solve the worlds problems, but at least we can be together in fellowship with others who understand. 

I also want to share an event being put on by our Rockville locals. I hope you can support them.




Thursday, November 26, 2020

Thanksgiving message

 I was going to post a Thanksgiving message when I read this message from my Congressman Joe Courtney He said what I was feeling better than I could have. BTW, glad you’re on the road to recovery Joe, and a big thank you to you for all you do. 

“This year’s Thanksgiving message is dedicated to them—to the nurses and health care workers on their feet for 12 hours at a time caring for our sick; the grocery clerks, delivery drivers and postal workers delivering the essential goods we all continue to rely on; the teachers and parents who have faced unprecedented challenges while they educate our students both in and out of the classroom; the volunteers working to deliver masks, PPE, and warm meals to folks who need them; and to every working family in eastern Connecticut that has had to balance life amid this pandemic. I am grateful for the tremendous strength and generosity of spirit we have witnessed from you all throughout this health crisis”

Sunday, November 22, 2020

Corona Virus update, 11/22

 Hospitalizations in Connecticut increased this week from 659 to 848. Projections are that it will reach 1,700 in late December or early January, before decreasing. (It reached 1,972 in the spring)
4,828 Connecticut residents have passed from Covid.
We have learned more about the virus and how to treat it and that will help to keep numbers lower than otherwise, but our healthcare workers, our teachers and paraprofessionals, and all our essential workers are tired, and that’s not good.
I spoke to one of our Registered Nurse Local presidents this week at the end of one of her shifts.  She said she knows 5 nurses who have resigned in the last 3 weeks and she knows nurses are afraid to come in for their scheduled shifts because they have a good chance of being “mandated” to stay late due to shortages. There is also growing concern on national calls about the long term affects on the number of people entering the healthcare and education professions.
We can help.
Wear a mask, socially distance the best you can, wash your hands.
I does make a difference.

Sweden tried it the other way.
In the spring, Sweden kept everything open and discouraged masks, hoping for heard immunity.
Their neighbors closed down. 
Finland had 375 deaths, Norway 305, Denmark 778.
Sweden had over 6,000, and are now in a bad second wave and are closing down.
Heard immunity did not develop. 

I have an request from our members of Rockville General Hospital. They are trying to maintain services at this small community hospital which is now part of a for profit chain. Would you sign their petition? They would appreciate it.
Be well.


Sunday, November 15, 2020

Corona Virus update 11/15

On March 8, The first case of Covid in Connecticut was announced.
On April 22, 1,972 Connecticut residents where in the hospital. 121 died that day.
On June 29, 98 people where hospitalized
On August 17, 42 people.
On September 21, 68.
On November 5, that number was 380.
On, November 13, it was 659. 

As we move indoors and as we have opened up schools and businesses, we have created a situation where Covid can more easily spread. Our closeness to each other and our containment of any virus in an enclosed area as opposed to the great outdoors, increases the ability of transmission between people.

Thankfully, we are not in the same situation as much of the country, where spread of the virus is faster and more widespread than at any time. But still, as our daily numbers increase, contract tracing becomes more difficult, hospitals and staff become more crowed and fatigued. 

We have learned much, in treatment and prevention. If we use that knowledge, we MAY be able to prevent numbers like we saw in April in Connecticut. 
But we must use that knowledge.
Wear a mask. 
Socially distance as best as possible.
Wash your hands often.
Get a flu shot.

We all hope a vaccine is on the horizon, latest news is encouraging.
Until then, we are all in this together, lets help each other as best we can.

Friday’s numbers:
43,078 tested.
2,746 positive. (6.37%) (In the summer this was lower than 1%)
659 hospitalized, up 42 that day, 279 that week.
4,737 CT residents have died, 11 on Friday, almost a quarter of a million in the US, 1.3 million worldwide.



Sunday, November 8, 2020

Covid is killing Healthcare Workers

 Healthcare workers have struggled for 11 months to obtain adequate PPE. We have been told by hospitals and other healthcare facilities that they are following CDC guidance. But CDC guidance is based on inventory and although we have been assured there is adequate inventory, we still do not operate with normal infection control practices. Hospitals do not tell the state or the public what their inventory is. Because of this, Healthcare workers are dying.

http://norwichbulletin.ct.newsmemory.com/publink.php?shareid=46797df2f

Saturday, November 7, 2020

This experiment in democracy

 As we await the results of this election (with anxiety), I think it’s important to remember that we are an experiment in democracy. Some 220+ years old, we are still young in the terms of human history. To be sure, the world is watching us and the world is rooting for us, to be as Abraham Lincoln said, “ that nation, so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure.” 

John Kennedy understood this when he said, 'We must always consider, that we shall be as a city upon a hill – the eyes of all people are upon us.'

We strive to be “a more perfect union” and we are not there yet but as MLK said, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.”

I pray that we stay calm, that we let the vote process play out, and that when it is done, we come together and move forward in this great experiment in democracy. 

Saturday, October 31, 2020

Covid 19 and Healthcare Heroes

 As many nurses have now died from coronavirus than were killed during the entirety of the First World War, the International Council of Nurses (ICN) has revealed.


The president has not ordered the production of N95s, the CDC has adjusted PPE requirements to “supply,” not infection control, OSHA has been slow to act. The House of Representatives has passed a bill calling for an OSHA Standard to protect Healthcare Workers but it has died in the Senate. Hospitals claim an “adequate” supply of PPE, yet require its reuse and refuse to make inventory numbers public. Nurses such as AFT Connecticut, AFT Nurses & Health Professionals, Backus Nurses have been forced to go on strike to get changes. 

I want to thank my congressman, Joe Courtney, (and others) for being a champion for healthcare workers. 

Don’t call us heroes and treat us like zeros.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/covid-nurse-death-world-war-one-ww1-b1448185.html

Friday, October 30, 2020

Corona Virus Update 10/30

 The % positive looked better today (yesterday was 6.1%!)

The average for the the past 7 days was 3.0% positive though.
329 people are hospitalized statewide, a number we haven’t seen since June 7th.
We lost 39 people to Covid this week in Connecticut.


Thank you to those who have responded to my inquiry of how many members have contracted Covid-19. I understand that in most cases these are estimates. I would like to add to this list so please continue to update me and I’ll post from time to time.
Local 5123 L&M 49 members
UHP                  126 (includes all of UConn Farmington)
5149 Backus      25 (since 10/1) plus 10 non-union members
5051 L&M          4
5047 Danbury    2
5119 VNA          4
I know there are others

Please encourage friends to get their flu shots and let me know if you need surgical masks. 

Yesterday, Members of AFT RNs of local 5052 at Natchaug Hospital and members of SEIU 1199 held an informational picket to draw attention to the dangers they face from physical assault on the job and the Corona Virus. 




AFT and other unions sue OSHA for failing to protect healthcare workers

The AFT and several other unions that represent healthcare workers sued Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration for unlawfully delaying rulemaking on an occupational standard to protect healthcare workers from infectious diseases transmitted by contact, droplets or air—like the flu, COVID-19 and Ebola. “Doctors, nurses, respiratory techs and other healthcare professionals have been treating COVID-19 patients for the better part of a year without basic workplace protections, including adequate PPE, robust testing and, most importantly, an infectious diseases standard that would require employers to establish a comprehensive infection control program to protect frontline workers who are facing daily exposure,” AFT President Randi Weingarten says.

Saturday, October 24, 2020

Scott

 I wanted to share this from a nurse friend, Scott M. Mesloh RN, who contracted Covid 19 at work because he was not provided proper PPE. He then started a simultaneous battle for worker’s compensation and with medical complications. 

This is why we need to continue to fight for proper PPE for medical and other essential workers. 

Please wear a mask when in public. Please social distance as best you can. Please advocate for essential worker’s safety and voice.  

This is just one day in his struggle 

Cardiac cath is complete, unfortunately when they got into my right atrium it triggered atrial flutter.  They gave me a massive dose of amiodarone.  But it hasn't worked.  So they have me in a private recovery room on telemetry.  The are talking about bringing me back in and knocking me out so they can do a cardioversion...paddles to my heart.  Either why if this continues and they can't fix it I will have to go on blood thinners to prevent clots in my heart.


The other news is they found some atherosclerosis in my arteries, but not horrible, and definely not enough to be causing all these symptoms.


They did give me 5 Valium before the procedure.  And during it, I got 1 mg Versed and 75 mg Fentanyl.  I was awake throughout the entire procedure.  It was very painful at times, but all in all not horrible.  


Trying to get hold of Jill, think she might be on the phone with doc or probably sleeping.


Now the monitor is beeping VTACH in red, hear come the nurses.  BBL.


P.S. Nurse says still in Atrial Flutter, looks like I'll have to go back in and get knocked out with Propofol and they are going to try and shock my heart back into a normal rhythm.  Unfortunately they don't have an anesthesiologist here right now.  Nothing ever goes easy with me.  I always have to be difficult.  She is surprised the meds aren't working well.  Never thought I'd need an AED.  Heartrate is going really high at times.  Feel it in my throat, like an esophageal spasm, tired and dizzy.  Fuck me, life sucks right now.  And I am all alone again.  COVID - 19 non believers, fuck you.  This is all too real.


11:20AM - Doctors on the phone with anesthesiologist right now.  Gonna get cardioverted, hopefully soon and I can get home with Jill and Jordan.  


11:30AM - Just got some Cardizem Injectable, will get another on in an hour.  Still in Atrial Flutter.


12:00PM - Turning phone off to conserve battery, getting more Cardizem soon.  And try and rest.  I'll be back on in a little while to update here.


12:30PM - Going in for cardioversion, they scheduled it for 1:00PM.  So only about another 30 - 45 min.  They said its quick, some light anesthesia and a shock or two to my heart.  Then I have to stay for an hour or two and see how it goes.   Hopefully all goes well and I can get diacharged around 3PM.  But I will have to go on bllod thinners...so theres that.


2:00PM - Cardioversion was successful.  I am awake and snacking on toast and juice.


Saturday, October 17, 2020

Backus Nurses Tentative Agreement

 Congratulations Backus Nurses, to you all. The bargaining team, strike captains, staff, members for your engagement, political friends for your support, other unions and community groups who participated, our state federation AFT Connecticut and national federation AFT - American Federation of Teachers AFT Nurses & Health Professionals and anyone I might be forgetting on your 4 year tentative agreement. 

This is a historic contract after a historic campaign that was well planned and executed and had at its core the fact the Backus Nurses is an engaged, democratic union. Connecticut AFL-CIO #BackUsBackOurNurses

Monday, October 12, 2020

Striking for respect

 You will hear a lot of reasons why the Backus Nurses will be on strike Tuesday and Wednesday. 

Let me tell you the truth. 

After battling on the front line of this pandemic for over 8 months, after fighting for proper PPE, after working short staffed and mandated double shifts, after pausing negotiations for several months to fight this virus, these nurse heroes hoped Hartford HealthCare would finally show them the respect they deserve. 

That is why they agreed to meet yesterday. I attended as an observer. 

At 10:00 in the morning the nurses offered a full counter proposal on ALL outstanding issues. They had made significant movement on key issues in this offer. They indicated to the hospital that if it were ready to make movement a solution was possible. None of these issues were new. They had been on the table since June. 

After 5 hours of caucusing amongst themselves, management had answers on some non economic issues. They indicated they were working on the economic issues. 

After 4 hours of more caucusing, they returned to say they could delay increasing insurance premiums for one year but had no movement on wages, NONE. 

They indicated that they could not move at all on a counter offer they had been reviewing for 9 hours. 

The nurses offered to continue talking or pick up on Monday IF management could say they could offer a counter proposal. 

Management only repeated that they were standing on their offer of 11 days ago. 

So when nurses say they are striking for respect- they are. 

Sunday, October 4, 2020

Don’t call us heroes and treat us like zeros

 I attended negotiations at Backus Hospital on Thursday night. I watched as AFT Connecticut President Jan Hochadel spoke. She expressed her gratitude to all nurses and remembered what they had meant to her as they walked the journey of breast cancer treatment and recovery with her. 

She spoke to the hospital, demanding they respect the nurses and bargain in good faith, and that they come to a tentative agreement that night or face a 2 day strike that had the full backing of AFT and the greater Labor movement.

Then I watched as managements lawyer, Rick, spend a half hour blaming and disrespecting the nurses.

I have never seen such disrespect.

It really didn’t mater what offer came after that. 

Rick “blew up” negotiations.

I was furious, but now after a couple of days, I can see that as bad as this “presentation” was, it is what the nurses experience day in and day out from Backus Hospital.

They are told through the news that there is plenty of PPE and that staff have it 100% of the time, yet it is rationed to them and they must reuse it.

They contract Covid and then Hartford Hospital fights against them getting coverage under Worker’s Compensation, and when a outbreak occurs, they are blamed for “a breach in protocol.” 

They find out through coworkers, not the hospital, that a patient they took care of tested positive for Covid.

When they stand up for their patient’s safety, they are intimidated.

Nurses leave when another job is available, leaving those who stay to work short staffed and mandated double shifts.

The nurses seek a fair contract.

They seek pay equity with other area hospitals so that retention will be less of an problem. They seek insurance that is not continually eroding benefits, not a plan that management can change on a whim, without renegotiation (as the hospital has proposed). They seek a commitment to adequate PPE. They seek safe staffing, asking only that the hospital notify union leadership when they cannot maintain the staffing matrix (which the hospital decides and reports to the state DPH), so that together it can be discussed and solutions can be found.

They seek the respect that all Healthcare Professional seek and deserve.

The situation at Backus may be the extreme, but it is not isolated to Backus, to Hartford Healthcare, or to Connecticut hospitals. It is happening across the country and across the industry, in hospitals, skilled nursing homes, home care, and elsewhere.

The strike is not inevitable, but if it is to happen, Healthcare Professionals across the country will stand with the Backus Nurses. The Labor Movement and the Community will stand with them.

Don’t call us heroes and treat us like zeros.

Saturday, September 26, 2020

Corona Virus Update 9/26 and Hartford Healthcare News

Yesterday, we passed 4500 Connecticut Covid deaths. 76 are hospitalized and 1.1% of tests were positive this week. 

NEWS AROUND HARTFORD HEALTHCARE-

Backus Hospital RNs have authorized a two day UHP strike. A final decision has not been made. They are at the table next Thursday night and we hope management will get serious. The nurses have done a good job preparing and they have the full support of AFT Connecticut and AFT national. 

Some of the outstanding issues are:

The hospital will not commit to maintaining an adaquate supply of PPE

The hospital wants to eliminate tier 3 on healthcare and they want the ability to change plans without further negotiations. 

Although they have given in on their insistence to eliminate steps in favor of a merit system (with no union input), The wage proposal on the table continues to leave salaries significantly behind market. 

In addition, management continues to insist in the press that nurses have had adequate PPE at all times. 

The nurses take these untrue statements as a form of disrespect. 

We still hope to avoid a strike but management has yet to show the good faith that is needed. 

Stay tuned.     https://www.facebook.com/backus.nurses/


In case you missed it, OSHA issued citations with financial penalties against Hartford Healthcare/Natchaug Hospital for Covid safety violations. https://www.theday.com/local-news/20200923/osha-alleges-covid-19-violations-at-natchaug-hospital

While in Windham, our community coalition to stop the closure of Labor & Delivery services continues to grow. https://www.facebook.com/Windham-United-to-Save-our-Healthcare-116068236895552/


 

Monday, September 21, 2020

Corona Virus update 9/21 (How it spreads)

Healthcare Professionals, led by members of AFT and other unions, have been advocating for full PPE precautions, including the use of N95 or better respirators, when treating Covid 19 positive or suspected patients and for all people to wear masks in public.
We received push back on this, at one time told to remove masks in the hospital "because they would scare patients."
However, even facing discipline, these Healthcare Professionals did not back down.
We owe them a great thanks.

On Friday, the CDC updated their web site on how Covid 19 spreads, to include "droplets or small particles, such as those in aerosols, produced when an infected person coughs, sneezes, sings, talks, or breathes"
And, "COVID-19 may spread through the droplets and airborne particles that are formed when a person who has COVID-19 coughs, sneezes, sings, talks, or breathes"

https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prevent-getting-sick/how-covid-spreads.html

This is what we’ve been saying since the beginning. Not based on studies (which take time) but on experience at the bedside and on observation of the quick spread of the virus.

 It’s likely one of the reasons, along with asymptotic transmission, on why the virus spreads so quickly. It’s also likely why masks slow the spread and why outdoor ventilation helps decrease spread. 

When we wear a mask, it decreases droplets and aerosols we might discharge by talking, etc. It's why N95s are critical for healthcare professionals working with positive or suspected patients. They filter particles which have become airborne.  

Thank you to all the Healthcare Professionals who continued to push for safe practices, even when others tried to discourage you. You truly are heroes.


From the CDC site

COVID-19 is thought to spread mainly through close contact from person to person, including between people who are physically near each other (within about 6 feet). People who are infected but do not show symptoms can spread the virus to others. We are still learning about how the virus spreads and the severity of illness it causes.

COVID-19 most commonly spreads

  • Between people who are in close contact with one another (within about 6 feet).
  • Through respiratory droplets or small particles, such as those in aerosols, produced when an infected person coughs, sneezes, sings, talks, or breathes.
    • These particles can be inhaled into the nose, mouth, airways, and lungs and cause infection. This is thought to be the main way the virus spreads.
    • Droplets can also land on surfaces and objects and be transferred by touch. A person may get COVID-19 by touching the surface or object that has the virus on it and then touching their own mouth, nose, or eyes. Spread from touching surfaces is not thought to be the main way the virus spreads.
  • It is possible that COVID-19 may spread through the droplets and airborne particles that are formed when a person who has COVID-19 coughs, sneezes, sings, talks, or breathes. There is growing evidence that droplets and airborne particles can remain suspended in the air and be breathed in by others, and travel distances beyond 6 feet (for example, during choir practice, in restaurants, or in fitness classes). In general, indoor environments without good ventilation increase this risk.

COVID-19 spreads very easily from person to person

How easily a virus spreads from person to person can vary. Airborne viruses, including COVID-19, are among the most contagious and easily spread. Some viruses are highly contagious, like measles, while other viruses do not spread as easily. The virus that causes COVID-19 appears to spread more efficiently than influenza, but not as efficiently as measles, which is highly contagious. In general, the more closely a person with COVID-19 interacts with others and the longer that interaction, the higher the risk of COVID-19 spread.

Saturday, September 19, 2020

Corona Virus Update 9/19

 Sisters and brothers,

We are 193 days since the first confirmed case of Covid 19 in Connecticut.
We are approaching 200,000 dead in the United States. 
4492 have died in Connecticut. 
We have been below 100 statewide hospitalizations in Connecticut since July 3
That’s 78 days under 100 hospitalizations in Connecticut. 
Yet.....
We still do not have enough PPE so that we can return to “Conventional Capacity Strategy”!!!!!
You remember that right?
It’s what we always thought of as “infection control.”
It’s what we would have been disciplined for not following. 
It means not reusing PPE that is meant to be disposable, while caring for multiple patients. 
78 days!

Yesterday’s numbers:
77 hospitalized (from a high of 1,972 and a low of 42)
4,492 Connecticut residents have died. 

Our positivity rate has started creeping up, now just above 1%. 

We have learned a lot. 
We have learned that this is an airborne virus and that we can contain it if we do not allow it to be some airborne. 
That is why masks are so important. 

We also know that Reopening businesses and schools and the continued reuse of PPE is a risk. 

Elsewhere, our courageous teachers and PSRPs are back in school. They are doing the best they can in a far from perfect environment. Many thanks to them. 

At Windham Hospital, Hartford Healthcare is trying to close the Labor & Delivery services for a poor community of color. 
Shame on them.
We are part of a community group opposed to this. Find them on Facebook at “Windham United to Save our Healthcare”

And at Backus Hospital Hartford Healthcare is trying to break the nurses. The nurses are fighting back and have voted to authorize a strike. 
Again, shame on Hartford Healthcare.  
You can find and support the nurses on Facebook and Twitter @Backusnurses. 

Be safe my friends and make sure you register and vote.
John

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Strike Authorization

 I am proud of all the 90+ locals that make up AFT Connecticut. But tonight I am especially proud of my home Local, Backus Nurses. 

They have found their voice and are using it to protect themselves and the community they serve.

Today they overwhelmingly authorized a strike to stand up for what they believe in.

Saturday, September 12, 2020

Thank you Backus Nurses

 My sisters and brothers of the Backus Federation of Nurses,

It’s been a tough year for you. You’ve been on the front line of the worst pandemic in 100 years. Every day you don your scrubs and masks and go at it again. You do it because you’re nurses. It’s what we do. Frankly, I’m not sure I would have the stamina if I was still in the ER. 

Tomorrow you have an important decision. You will vote on whether or not to authorize a strike. You know the reasons and you also know the risks. You have been involved since the beginning. You have attended open negotiations, informational town halls, planning meetings, and informational pickets. You serve as delegates, executive board members, on the negotiation team and on the CAT (contract action team)

I will not insult your intelligence by telling you how to think. 

But I must respond to the disrespectful and repeated emails that Donna Handley has been putting out to all of you. The underlying theme of the emails is that you can trust her. 

You’re intelligent people. I’ll let you decide on this matter. 

I offer you the extreme gratitude of the 30,000 members of AFT Connecticut and the 1.7 million members of AFT - American Federation of Teachers. 

To us you truly are heroes. 

Solidarity and gratitude,

John


John Brady 

AFT Connecticut Vice President 

Proud member of Local 5149, Backus Federation of Nurses 



Friday, August 28, 2020

Corona Virus Update 8/28

 It’s been a long hall my Healthcare  friends. I don’t need to tell you that. If my math is correct, today marks 171 days since the first confirmed case of Covid in Connecticut. 

52,495 Connecticut residents have tested positive. 4,465 have died. 
At one point we had almost 2,000 hospitalized. 
Today’s numbers:
% positive tests was 1% today, there were no deaths, hospitalized up 4 to 60 statewide. We had 5 deaths in the last 7 days.
We seem to have leveled off for several weeks. 
% positive tests are hovering around 1% or slightly lower. Deaths are 5-10 a week. Hospitalizations between 45-65. 
I expect numbers to hover until a vaccine  or a second wave come. 
That being said, with every new thing that opens, including schools, a potential surge awaits. 
If we see any jumps from this “baseline” that would be our first sign that a second wave has started. 
We are learning how to better treat it and prevent it, so that is a big positive. 
If asked what is the most important, I’d say masks.

Our educator members are worried. They don’t have the medical background our healthcare workers do so they have a fear of the unknown. 
It’s understandable. 
I know our healthcare workers have already carried the heaviest burden. I have to now ask you to be there for our non-healthcare members. Acknowledge their concerns and assure them that if they become ill, you will be there to care for them. 
That assurance will help. 
To our educators, and state employees who may also be returning to work, please wear your masks, wash your hands, and socially distance. 
We’ll get through this together. 
Be well, 
John

Saturday, August 22, 2020

A letter to educators from a nurse

 A letter to educators from a nurse. 

My sisters and brothers,

Today, on the eve of schools reopening, I’d like to address the teachers, paraprofessionals and school support staff that have become as near and dear to my heart as the nurses I used to work side by side with. 

It is an honor to serve as Executive Vice President of AFT Connecticut. In that role I get to represent an incredible group of Public Employees, Nurses & Health Professionals and educators. 

Our educators are incredibly dedicated professionals, each and every one of you.

You care as much about your students as I cared about my patients. 

I tell people I became a trauma nurse instead of a teacher or PSRP because I didn’t have the courage to stand at the front of a classroom. While there are many differences in our roles, there are also at least as many similarities. 

You do not do this for the glory or for the money, you do this because something inside you says you must. You MUST do what you can to leave this world better than you found it. 

I get that. 

I TOTALLY get that. 

THAT is what binds is together. Nurses and healthcare professionals, teachers and PSRPs, and public servants. 

It’s what makes us a union of caregivers. 

So, as you prepare to go back to school, I know you have concerns and worries. For your own health, your family and your students. 

This is understandable. 

Please know that Your Local, state and national officers understand and care. Please know we fight for you and your students every day. Please know we will not abandon you. 

I am available 24/7 for any questions. Jan Hochadel is in constant contact with the leadership of your local and those in state and municipal leadership. Divisional VPs Mary Yordon and Shellye Davis are incredible advocates on your behalf, and Randi Weingarten has your back. 

Please also remember that our school nurses stand ready to help. 

Your dedication to education is deeply appreciated. 

We cannot predict what the school year will look like, but together, with your leadership, we will do the best we can in this situation. 

Be well and be safe. 

Sunday, August 16, 2020

Corona Virus Update 8/16

 I haven't done a Corona Virus update in some time but reading an article on T cell immunity and the many questions I have received from members on safety and school reopening, perhaps it is time.

First, I am not an epidemiologist or a virologist. I am a registered nurse and I have followed this virus closely and tried to learn as much as I can. I can't speak with certainties, but I can give my opinions. A  part of that reason is that I am not an expert and a part is that even the experts are still learning, as this is a relatively new virus, and studies take time.

We were hit early in Connecticut.  Our first confirmed case was on March 8th. The first confirmed Connecticut death was on March 20th. On 4/22 we had 1,972 Connecticut residents hospitalized. On May 20th we started a slow reopening of our businesses.At that time, we had 887 hospitalized and 3,529 residents had died. 

As of last Friday, 8/14, almost 5 months since our first confirmed case, 56 were hospitalize, 4,453 have died, 935,680 have been tested, 50,897 have been positive. Our hospitalizations have hovered between 72-53 for a month and our positive test rate have remained near or below 1% for several weeks. Meanwhile, the rest of the country is not fairing as well.

Scientific studies take time. This virus appeared around the beginning of the year, so much of what we 'know" is yet to be proven. However, we know that this is a Corona Virus, as is SARS, MERS, and the common cold. We are reasonably confident that it spreads primarily, but not exclusively by the respiratory tract. We know it can live outside the body for at least a few hours and maybe under the right conditions, several days. We know that it can be spread by coughing, sneezing, breathing, talking and singing. We are reasonably certain it can be spread 3-6 feet by droplets that we expel when we cough, sneeze, breath, talk and sing. It appears, from some research, that it may be able to be airborne (meaning it could remain in the air longer than a droplet and travel further), although there is disagreement as to the degree this can be so. We believe a person can be without symptoms (asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic) and still spread the virus. There is some evidence that we may build some immunity if we have the virus or perhaps a similar Corona virus, although the degree of protection and how long it would last, is unknown.

Understanding that there is still more we are uncertain of than certain, how should we proceed?

Cautiously, I believe. I believe that is why we have decreased cases in Connecticut. We quickly asked people to stay at home and we have slowly reversed that as the number of cases has decreased. We must also be willing to readjust and tighten our measures if cases increase.

For now, assuming this virus is spread primarily by respiratory means, I believe universal mask wearing, hand washing, cleaning surfaces, avoiding large gatherings, and gathering outdoors when possible, remain prudent measures. Masks decrease the risk that I may unknowingly have the virus and spread it to you. Hand washing in case I touch a contaminated surface. Avoiding large gatherings and being outdoors because increased numbers of people increase the risk of virus being present in the air and being indoor concentrates that virus more than being outdoors.

Those caring for infected individuals or suspected individuals should use full airborne precautions, including gowns, gloves, face shields, and N95 or better respirators, and this PPE should be single use, unless designed to be decontaminated between uses. This PPE should not be used when treating multiple patients or even the same patient on multiple visits.

These are my best recommendations based on what I have read and observed. although some of them are inconvenient, none of them carry any risk, and most experts agree that they will help.

Someday we will have full studies and more certainties, and even a vaccination. Until then we should air on the side of caution. 4,453 have died in Connecticut, 169,000 in the US, 772,000 worldwide.

Be safe.

Sunday, August 2, 2020

45 years of love and friendship

45 years ago today Michelle and I officially became partners in life. Obviously, I got the better part of the deal.
It’s hard to put into words what she means to me. We are a part of each other, yet we each remain our own persons too.
I love her very much.

Saturday, August 1, 2020

Don’t call us Heroes and treat us as Zeros

For those who are not aware, this is my home Local and the hospital I served in for 21 years. I am a proud charter member of the Local, served on the organizing and negotiations committees and as president. I remain as a member of the Executive Board.
Management often calls our AFT Connecticut AFT Nurses & Health Professionals members heroes but treats them like zeros.
They are there every day for us at Backus, Windham, Natchaug, L&M, Johnson, Windham,Manchester, Rockville, John Dempsey, Danbury and New Milford hospitals, as well as many visiting nurses agencies, clinics and schools.
They have risked their lives for us in this pandemic.
This is the international Year of the Nurse and Midwife.
Let’s treat them like true heroes.
Please come out and support them.

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Corona Virus update 7/21

This pandemic has had multiple crisis.
The medical crisis of so many sick and so many dead.
The economic crisis of the shutdown of the economy.
The racial healthcare disparity crisis worsened.
And the healthcare coverage crisis.

The Urban Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation report (here) that “More than 10 million people are estimated to lose employer-sponsored health insurance as a result of pandemic-related job loss in their household between April and December 2020.”  The report continues, “Projections show 3.3 million of those people will regain employer-sponsored insurance by being added to a family member’s policy, 2.8 million people will enroll in Medicaid, and 600,000 people will enroll in the individual market, mainly via the Affordable Care Act’s marketplace. Still, 3.5 million people will become uninsured.”  

 A couple Of things to report.
Nuvance Healthcare (Danbury and New Milford) is now instructing our members to NOT reuse N95s. This is significant and is where we want all hospital systems to get too. We must push for a return to normal infection control.

Prospect Healthcare (Manchester and Rockville) is starting to fit test and train with elastomeric respirators, which, unlike N95s, are designed for decontamination and reuse.

134 days since the first confirmed case of Covid in Connecticut, we are at 62 people hospitalized and there were no new reported deaths today. In total, 4,406 have passed away. Positive tests are running just below 1%. (0.7% today)
Although this is welcome news, other states are recording record cases. We must learn from what we have been through and continue the practices that are helping.

Be well.


Friday, July 17, 2020

Corona Virus Update 7/17

We are 130 days since our first confirmed case of Covid in Connecticut.
To date, 4,396 residents have died from Covid.
We currently have 66 hospitalizations statewide, after topping out at 1,972.

Today, after 4 months of advocating for a presumption of Workers Compensation for essential workers, with an incredible amount of effort by labor, with help from the chairs of the the Labor and Insurance Committees of the General Assembly, the Governor posted this:

Connecticut owes a debt to the health care professionals, grocery store clerks, and other essential workers who stood at their posts during the darkest days of this pandemic. (1/3)
1:26 PM · Jul 17, 2020Twitter Web App
Replying to
We can pay a part of that debt by providing workers who contracted COVID-19 on the job during those days with a timely, straightforward opportunity to claim any benefits they are due through the workers’ compensation system. (2/3)
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I'm committed to providing that opportunity through a forthcoming exec order. I appreciate the employers who've done the right thing by their employees, the Workers Comp Commission for operating during the pandemic, and most of all the workers for their efforts & sacrifice. (3/3)




We welcome the Governor's announcement an look forward to reading it. Our essential workers have taken care of us, they deserve to be taken care of by us.

Be well,
John