Working Paper: NBER ID: w15855
Authors: Jonathan Gruber; Samuel A. Kleiner
Abstract: Concerns over the impacts of hospital strikes on patient welfare led to substantial delay in the ability of hospitals to unionize. Once allowed, hospitals unionized rapidly and now represent one of the largest union sectors of the U.S. economy. Were the original fears of harmful hospital strikes realized as a result? In this paper we analyze the effects of nurses' strikes in hospitals on patient outcomes. We utilize a unique dataset collected on nurses' strikes over the 1984 to 2004 period in New York State, and match these strikes to a restricted use hospital discharge database which provides information on treatment intensity, patient mortality and hospital readmission. Controlling for hospital specific heterogeneity, patient demographics and disease severity, the results show that nurses' strikes increase in-hospital mortality by 19.4% and 30-day readmission by 6.5% for patients admitted during a strike, with little change in patient demographics, disease severity or treatment intensity. This study provides some of the first analytical evidence on the effects of health care strikes on patients, and suggests that hospitals functioning during nurses' strikes are doing so at a lower quality of patient care.
Keywords: nurses' strikes; patient outcomes; hospital care; unionization
JEL Codes: I12; I23; J52; J62
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
nurses' strikes (J52) | in-hospital mortality (I12) |
nurses' strikes (J52) | 30-day readmission rate (I11) |
nurses' strikes (J52) | quality of medical care (I14) |
replacement workers during strikes (J52) | in-hospital mortality (I12) |
replacement workers during strikes (J52) | 30-day readmission rate (I11) |