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Doctor supports strike, says Providence Health 'hemorrhaging providers'

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Monday, January 6, 2025   

Oregon's largest health care strike, including the state's first doctors' strike, is set to begin this Friday if a settlement cannot be reached.

The Oregon Nurses Association delivered a 10-day notice of an open-ended strike to Providence Health and Services in Oregon last week, accusing it of dangerous levels of understaffing, neglecting patient care and offering inadequate pay and benefits.

Dr. Charlie Saltalamacchia, an OB/GYN physician at Providence Women's Clinic, said in labor and delivery there is no cap on the number of patients, leading to unsafe conditions.

"We can sometimes have patients that we're responsible for in excess of 30 during a shift," Saltalamacchia observed. "There can be multiple emergencies happening at the same time with no limits. "

Without a deal, nearly 5,000 nurses, doctors and other providers will walk off the job at all eight Oregon Providence hospitals and six clinics starting this Friday. CEO Jennifer Burrows wrote in a statement Providence offered double-digit pay raises for nurses and accused the union of refusing to compromise. The union countered they are being stonewalled.

Saltalamacchia noted providers often stay longer than their shifts and are asking for pay and working conditions comparable to other hospitals.

"These health care workers have worked for so many years at great personal expense and cost to provide excellent patient care," Saltalamacchia emphasized. "These requests are just really reasonable."

Providence is a nonprofit operating 51 hospitals in seven states. It merged with California's St. Joseph system in 2016.

Jay Formick, a registered nurse at Providence Willamette Falls Medical Center, said the merger marked a turning point.

"They went from being companions or partners in the process of negotiating a contract to becoming hard and fast opponents," Formick contended.

Providence initially refused to negotiate during the 10-day strike notice, prompting the nurses association to file an unfair labor practice charge. Providence has since said in a statement it will resume talks with union doctors and urged them not to strike, citing the difficulty of replacing them compared with nurses.

Disclosure: The Oregon Nurses Association contributes to our fund for reporting on Civic Engagement, Health Issues, Livable Wages/Working Families, and Mental Health. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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