Lansing Legislative Summary
As you may be aware,
HB 4403 was passed recently
regarding the delegation of our duties by the surgeon. Although
we are very excited to have clarification on this matter, it did
not address our ultimate goal this year for certification as a
requirement for employment. With that in mind, House
Representative from Oakland County, John Stakoe accepted our
proposal to write a new bill speaking specifically to mandatory
certification or education as a means of employment. On January
11th,
HB 5544 was introduced and referred to the Committee on
Health Policy.
On
Tuesday, January 31st, testimony was offered for HB 5544. This
was our moment to hit the ground running. Students, surgical
technologists, and instructors from across Michigan converged on
Lansing to speak on the bill’s behalf. Joe Long started our
lineup. He fielded the questions tossed out by the Committee. As
with any ‘game’, the other team had their chance to score. Mary
Murphy, from Munson Medical Center, and a representative from
the Michigan Hospital Association (MHA) each took their turn at
bat. Our opponents were ruthless as they spouted their
ill-founded reasons for not needing educated surgical
technologists. Mary’s reasoning included mandatory prophylactic
antibiotics as the answer to a lack of asepsis. In her corner
the representative from MHA, spoke in direct opposition to the
American Hospital Association (AHA) Mission Statement whose
vision it is to improve the quality of patient care with
objectives that encourage professional education.
The
Committee Chair, Ed Gaffney allowed five MSA-AST representatives
a short time to speak in support of HB 4455. Julia Jackson,
department chair from Baker, Flint, opened our testimony with a
prepared speech, Paula Hayes, the program chair from Baker in
Jackson followed. Diamond Oakley, a student from OCC/WHB
Surgical Tech program offered her viewpoint from a learner’s
perspective, Laurel Johnson, employed by Metropolitan Hospital -
Center for Plastic Surgery, shared with the committee her
witness to an uneducated surgical technologist who panicked when
a patient emergency occurred during a C-section. I ended our
testimony with a quote from the
American College of Surgeons who
support mandatory education through accredited programs.
In summary, the outcome of the testimony did not go as we had
hoped.
In a follow-up conversation with Representative Stakoe, we
learned that Ed Gaffney would not allow a vote on this bill
until we have the support of the Michigan Hospital Association.
Our game plan: Meet with the MHA to discuss what changes they
deem necessary; discuss what concessions we will allow and come
to a consensus. Although we may not have hit a homerun this time
out, the game is far from over. There is still time to sign up
for the home team. Please take the time to write your
representatives in support of our bill. Ask family and friends
to do the same. It is with public support that this bill will
score.
Sincerely,
Rebecca Pieknik
President, MSA-AST
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