More than 4,000 nurses went on strike at five Twin Cities Allina hospitals Sunday — some in tears as they left their shifts early in the morning and their patients in the hands of replacements recruited from across the country to cover the seven-day walkout.
Nurse Leah Otterness said goodbye to an orthopedic patient who was crying at Unity Hospital in Fridley.
"They will do their best to take care of you," said Otterness, who like most striking nurses was shuffled out of her hospital before the replacements arrived.
Whether the transition to 1,400 replacement nurses was smooth depends on who you ask. The Minnesota Nurses Association (MNA) reported problems at Allina's flagship, Abbott Northwestern in Minneapolis, such as replacements showing up for duty in intensive care with their licenses to practice in the state still pending.
Allina officials said doctors, nursing supervisors, respiratory therapists and nursing assistants pitched in to help the new nurses acclimate. Abbott had overstaffed for the day and compensated for the nurses whose licenses weren't finalized or whose skills were mismatched to their initial assignments.
"I don't know how you could make a complete changeover of all your nurses without having some challenges," said Dr. Ben Bache-Wiig, Abbott's president. He commended nurses and staff for their handling of critical cases Sunday morning, including a cardiac arrest that occurred an hour before the 7 a.m. shift change.
Leaders of the union-represented nurses and Allina expressed eagerness to renew negotiations, but no movement on the key issue: health insurance.
Allina wants its metro hospital nurses to surrender their union-protected health benefits and transition to company plans that provide more financial incentives for using lower-cost care. Affected nurses are at Abbott in Minneapolis and Unity Hospital in Fridley, and also at United Hospital in St. Paul, Mercy Hospital in Coon Rapids and Phillips Eye Institute in Minneapolis.