
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE
FOR
H. B. 2504
(By Delegates Hatfield, Angotti, Doyle, L. Smith, Susman, Perdue
and Compton)
(Originating in the Committee on Government Organization)
[April 3, 2001]
A BILL to amend article seven, chapter thirty of the code of West
Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, by
adding thereto a new section, designated section eighteen,
relating to creating a nursing shortage study commission.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That article seven, chapter thirty of the code of West
Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be
amended by adding thereto a new section, designated section
eighteen, to read as follows:
ARTICLE 7. REGISTERED PROFESSIONAL NURSES.
§30-7-18. Nursing shortage study commission; legislative findings;
members, appointment and expenses; duties.

(a) The Legislature finds the following:

(1) Health care services are becoming complex and it is
increasingly difficult for patients to access integrated services;

(2) Quality of patient care is jeopardized because of
insufficient nursing staff;

(3) To ensure the adequate protection of patients in acute
care settings, it is essential that qualified registered nurses and
other licensed nurses be accessible and available to meet the needs
of patients;

(4) In West Virginia, and across the country, concerns about
an increasing nursing shortage continue to grow;

(5) A number of factors contribute to the growing shortages in
qualified nursing personnel;

(6) The way care is delivered has changed dramatically over
the last decade with more people being treated in outpatient
settings, shorter and more intense lengths of stay in acute and
long-term care settings, and the development of alternatives to
nursing home care;
(7) These changes have led to a number of employment options
becoming available to nurses that did not exist previously, making
it difficult for employers of nurses to recruit and retain
qualified nursing personnel;

(8) Severe cutbacks in the federal Medicare program, state
budgetary pressures related to the Medicaid program and continued
pressure from insurers to reduce their costs and to retrospectively
deny payment for services rendered, have: (A) Made it extremely difficult for many providers to keep up with other employers in
salaries and benefits and to recruit and retain qualified nursing
personnel; and (B) increased stresses in the work environment;

(9) The increasing reliance on temporary employment agencies
to meet nursing personnel needs further complicates the situation
as continuity of care is disrupted, quality of patient care is
jeopardized, and costs pressures are further increased; and

(10) Because of the multifaceted nature of these problems, it
is critical that all of the interested and affected parties
cooperate and collaborate in the development of solutions.

(b) A nursing shortage study commission shall be created by
the West Virginia board of examiners for registered professional
nurses. The board shall appoint eleven members to the commission.
The board shall appoint:

(1) Two individuals who are on the board of examiners for
registered professional nurses, one of which is employed in a
school of nursing;

(2) Two individuals that are employed as registered
professional nurses in a hospital and who work primarily providing
direct patient care;

(3) Two registered professional nurses who work as long-term
care nurses, one of whom works in a nursing home and one of whom
works for a home health agency, both of whom work primarily providing direct patient care;

(4) One administrator of a hospital in this state;

(5) One doctoral prepared nurse researcher;

(6) One nursing home administrator; and

(7) Two representatives of the public not currently or
previously employed in hospital, nursing home or for a related
entity.

(c) Members of the commission are not entitled to compensation
for services performed as members, but are entitled to
reimbursement for all reasonable and necessary expenses actually
incurred in the performance of their duties. Six of the appointed
members is a quorum for the purpose of conducting business. The
board shall designate a chair, who is not a public official. The
commission shall conduct all meetings in accordance with the open
meeting law pursuant to article nine-a, chapter six of this code.

(d) The commission shall:

(1) Study the nursing shortage in West Virginia and ways to
alleviate it, including, but not limited to:

(A) Evaluating mechanisms currently available in the state and
elsewhere intended to enhance education, recruitment, and retention
of nurses in the workforce and to improve quality of care;

(B) Assessing the impact of shortages in nursing personnel on
access to, and the delivery of, quality patient care;

(C) Developing recommendations on strategies to reverse the
growing shortage of qualified nursing personnel in the state,
including:

(i) Determining what changes are needed to existing programs,
current scholarship programs and funding mechanisms to better
reflect and accommodate the changing health care delivery
environment and to improve quality of care to meet the needs of
patients;

(ii) Facilitating career advancement within nursing;

(iii) Identifying more accurately specific shortage areas in
a more timely manner;

(iv) Attracting middle and high school students into nursing
as a career; and

(v) Projecting a more positive and professional image of
nursing.

(2) Report to the Legislature by the first day of February,
two thousand two, its findings and recommendations.