The post 7th Day Of NYC Nurses Strike Highlights Ongoing Healthcare Problems appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Nurses at Mount Sinai West in New York City areThe post 7th Day Of NYC Nurses Strike Highlights Ongoing Healthcare Problems appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Nurses at Mount Sinai West in New York City are

7th Day Of NYC Nurses Strike Highlights Ongoing Healthcare Problems

Nurses at Mount Sinai West in New York City are protesting unsafe working conditions, citing chronic understaffing and overwhelming patient loads that prevent them from delivering adequate care. (Photo by: Deb Cohn-Orbach/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The largest nurses strike in New York City history reached its seventh day on Sunday with no clear end in sight. And even if this strike at some point gets resolved, it should be yet another striking reminder that the U.S. healthcare system is like the title of that 2018 song from lovelytheband: “Broken.” A broken healthcare system, in turn, is the opposite of a lovely thing for patients and the rest of society.

NYC Nurses Strike Began On Monday

The NYC nurses strike struck on January 12, when around 15,000 nurses essentially said “I Can’t Go for That (No Can Do)” about their current pay and working conditions and walked off their job at hospitals within the Mount Sinai, Montefiore and NewYork-Presbyterian systems. Since then the New York State Nurses Association—the union representing the nurses—has been engaging in negotiations with hospital management. The union has been arguing for pay increases and increased measures to protect the safety of nurses. After talks at the beginning of the week stalled, a federal mediator joined the mix.

But so far, there are no signs that they are anywhere close to any agreement. In a statement, Angela Karafazli, a NewYork-Presbyterian spokeswoman, described the union’s proposals as “unreasonable.” Meanwhile, the New York State Nurses Association deemed the progress as “very little” and indicated that it “put forward a revised set of proposals that hospital executives rejected without offering a counter proposal.”

Kaiser Permanente Nurses Strike Planned

Meanwhile, the United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals have delivered a 10-day notice that over 31,000 nurses and other health care professionals at Kaiser Permanente intend to go on strike on Monday, January 26. This strike would affect nearly 20 Kaiser hospitals and over 200 clinics throughout California and Hawaii. The union has been arguing that Kaiser has billions of dollars in financial reserves and investments at Kaiser, yet continue to understaff its healthcare facilities and pile increasing workloads onto healthcare professionals while not providing wages that have kept pace with rising costs of housing, food, and health care.

Nurses Strike Is Not Surprising Given Ongoing Burnout Problem Among All Healthcare Professionals

All of this should be about as shocking as people arguing over social media. A report issued by the U.S. Surgeon General in 2022 entitled “Addressing Health Worker Burnout: The U.S. Surgeon General’s Advisory on Building a Thriving Health Workforce” deemed the U.S. healthcare system as “A system already at a breaking point.” The report served as a call to address the long-increasing problem of healthcare worker burnout. The report stated that “Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, the National Academy of Medicine found that burnout had reached ‘crisis levels. among the U.S. health workforce, with 35-54% of nurses and physicians and 45-60% of medical students and residents reporting symptoms of burnout.”

Yep, if there were a Festivus specifically for the U.S. healthcare system, the airing of grievances part could go on and on and on with Frank Costanza saying “I got a lot of problems with youz people,” meaning the people running the system. The Surgeon General’s report mentioned challenges and demands that health workers faced even before the COVID-19 pandemic. These included a rapidly changing health care environment, complex arrays of information to synthesize, increasingly burdensome administrative tasks, loss of autonomy, flexibility, and voice, spreading misinformation and disinformation, lack of leadership support, unrealistic expectations, poor care coordination, harassment and discrimination, and excessive hours and workload.

Nurses Strike Highlights Increasing Pay Gap Between Healthcare Executives And Healthcare Professionals

Nurses going on strike in NYC have mentioned that the pay of healthcare executives at the Mount Sinai, Montefiore and NewYork-Presbyterian systems suggests that there are more resources available to pay nurses and other healthcare professionals more. For example, the reported salary of Steven J. Corwin, the outgoing CEO and President of New York-Presbyterian Hospital, in 2024 was over $26 million, which would be 161 times the $163,000 average salary of a nurse, according to what Somaiyah Hafeez wrote for The Mirror.

This pay gap between executives and healthcare professionals—you know the people who are actually doing the direct patient care work—isn’t unique to these healthcare systems in NYC. A study published in the journal Health Affairs in August 2025 found that the average wage of chief executives rose by 27.5% from 2009 to 2023 compared to the only 9.8% rise in the average pay for all hospital employees over that same time period. This sort of mirrors what’s been happening in the corporate world in general in the U.S.

The past three decades have seen increasing corporatization of healthcare in the U.S. That’s included bigger and bigger chunks of healthcare dollars going to not only executives but also things like posh offices and advertising.

COVID-19 Pandemic Highlighted Existing Problems With The Healthcare System

The COVID-19 pandemic in many ways was like a gigantic vacuum cleaner. Not only did it suck, the pandemic also uncovered many of the existing problems in society. One of those big problems was the U.S. healthcare system. Recall that in 2020 the U.S. healthcare system struggled to keep up with the influx of patients. Many clinics and hospitals did not have the staffing and redundancy to handle the surges in demand. Heck clinics and hospitals didn’t even have enough N95 face masks to go around. A lot of healthcare professionals, including doctors and nurses, donated time by working extra long hours without compensation to take care of patients.

Meanwhile, misinformation and disinformation about health raged on and on, with people and bots making claims that fostered distrust of healthcare professionals. All of this hasn’t created the greatest working conditions and environments for healthcare professionals.

But rather than fix all of the aforementioned problems, political and business leaders seem to have largely ignored them. And that will continue to be to the detriment of society. Healthcare professionals like nurses who directly care for patients are central to healthcare. If they aren’t happy or present, patient care will undoubtedly suffer. A nurses strike can have reverberating effects as the existing work then gets passed on to other already overstretched healthcare professionals like doctors, physical therapists and technicians.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucelee/2026/01/18/7th-day-of-nyc-nurses-strike-highlights-ongoing-healthcare-problems/

Market Opportunity
StrikeBit AI Logo
StrikeBit AI Price(STRIKE)
$0.006828
$0.006828$0.006828
-0.01%
USD
StrikeBit AI (STRIKE) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Cashing In On University Patents Means Giving Up On Our Innovation Future

Cashing In On University Patents Means Giving Up On Our Innovation Future

The post Cashing In On University Patents Means Giving Up On Our Innovation Future appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. “It’s a raid on American innovation that would deliver pennies to the Treasury while kneecapping the very engine of our economic and medical progress,” writes Pipes. Getty Images Washington is addicted to taxing success. Now, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is floating a plan to skim half the patent earnings from inventions developed at universities with federal funding. It’s being sold as a way to shore up programs like Social Security. In reality, it’s a raid on American innovation that would deliver pennies to the Treasury while kneecapping the very engine of our economic and medical progress. Yes, taxpayer dollars support early-stage research. But the real payoff comes later—in the jobs created, cures discovered, and industries launched when universities and private industry turn those discoveries into real products. By comparison, the sums at stake in patent licensing are trivial. Universities collectively earn only about $3.6 billion annually in patent income—less than the federal government spends on Social Security in a single day. Even confiscating half would barely register against a $6 trillion federal budget. And yet the damage from such a policy would be anything but trivial. The true return on taxpayer investment isn’t in licensing checks sent to Washington, but in the downstream economic activity that federally supported research unleashes. Thanks to the bipartisan Bayh-Dole Act of 1980, universities and private industry have powerful incentives to translate early-stage discoveries into real-world products. Before Bayh-Dole, the government hoarded patents from federally funded research, and fewer than 5% were ever licensed. Once universities could own and license their own inventions, innovation exploded. The result has been one of the best returns on investment in government history. Since 1996, university research has added nearly $2 trillion to U.S. industrial output, supported 6.5 million jobs, and launched more than 19,000 startups. Those companies pay…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 03:26
Stellar (XLM) Price Analysis for February 1

Stellar (XLM) Price Analysis for February 1

The post Stellar (XLM) Price Analysis for February 1 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The crypto market keeps reaching new local lows, according to CoinStats
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/02/02 05:21
PEPE Price Prediction: Meme Coin Targets Recovery Despite Technical Weakness

PEPE Price Prediction: Meme Coin Targets Recovery Despite Technical Weakness

The post PEPE Price Prediction: Meme Coin Targets Recovery Despite Technical Weakness appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Timothy Morano Feb 01, 2026 16:58
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/02/02 05:00