Biggest Nurses Strike In NYC History Caused At Least 3 Deaths, Including 2 Babies
A sweeping nurses strike affecting three of New York City’s largest hospital systems has now been linked by union officials to multiple patient deaths, raising alarm as the walkout enters its second week.
According to a union representative, at least three people have died at Mount Sinai since nurses at Mount Sinai, Montefiore Medical Center, and New York-Presbyterian began striking on Monday. The reported deaths include two newborns who died during childbirth and a 24-year-old patient in intensive care. The official said the fatalities were connected, at least in part, to reduced levels of care resulting from the strike.
“Our PCAs [patient care associates] are saying a lot more code blues are being called,” the union honcho and longtime Mount Sinai’s nurse, who requested anonymity, told The NY Post.
The claims emerged as the walkout by nearly 15,000 nurses — now in its sixth day and backed by Mayor Zohran Mamdani — continued to disrupt operations across the city’s hospital network.
“Code blue means somebody’s dead. It has a medical emergency. So, like, you have to start CPR and an emergency team comes. It’s normally doctors, nurses, nurse practitioners, anesthesia, and respiratory. It’s literally just to try to resuscitate someone.”
“We’re hearing that more alerts are being called,” she added. “Our patients are sicker. And more people are dying. I mean, I’m not gonna lie to you about that.”
The same union official said the hospitals’ reliance on temporary replacement nurses has created dangerous conditions, arguing that those brought in to cover shifts are stretched too thin and lack familiarity with the facilities. “There are some really unsafe things happening,” she said.
The current walkout is the largest nurses strike in New York City history and the longest in recent years, exceeding a 2023 action in which about 7,000 workers struck for three days.
Hospital administrators, who were caught off guard by the 2023 strike and ultimately agreed to contracts favorable to nurses, have taken a far tougher approach this time. The New York State Nurses Association is pressing for improved staffing ratios, higher wages, and the preservation of health benefits.
Katie Duke, a retired nurse practitioner from Mount Sinai who is picketing alongside NYSNA members, said she has heard similar accounts from hospital staff who believe patient deaths are tied to the strike. She pointed specifically to the case of a 24-year-old patient who reportedly died in intensive care while receiving advanced life support.
“It is the highest level of life support for somebody who’s waiting on, like, a lung transplant,” Duke said
“So, the patient … wasn’t restrained and sedated properly. He pulled a tube out of his neck, and he died.”
Duke placed responsibility squarely on hospital leadership, accusing administrators of compromising safety rather than reaching an agreement with nurses.
“There are things happening inside, because this hospital is settling for staff who are not qualified to take care of patients, because they refuse to negotiate with the nurses and give them their contract,” she said.
“So they are sacrificing patient safety. And the problem with this is that hospitals feel like nurses are so easily replaceable, but they’re not… My heart goes out to that patient’s family.”
{Matzav.com}
