Skip to main content

Kaiser mental health workers to begin five-day strike Monday across California


#KaiserPermanente #Therapists #Psychologists #Socialworkers #MFT #LCSW,

About 4,000 unionized therapists, psychologists, social workers, and other mental health workers at 100 Kaiser Permanente medical offices across California plan to begin a five-day strike Monday.

The strikes are slated to start at 6 a.m. Monday at 10 locations in Southern, Central and Northern California. In the Bay Area, workers will form picket lines Monday outside Kaiser’s San Francisco medical center on Geary Boulevard and two Santa Clara locations — the medical center on Lawrence Expressway and Tantau Clinic on Homestead Road.

Protests by members of the National Union of Healthcare Workers will continue throughout the week at various locations. They plan to picket outside Kaiser’s Oakland medical center on Tuesday; Livermore, Redwood City, San Leandro, Vallejo and Walnut Creek medical centers on Wednesday; and Oakland, San Jose, San Rafael and Vacaville on Friday.

The workers are objecting to what they say are long wait times — weeks or sometimes months — for patients trying to see a mental health professional for follow-up appointments.

The union’s contract with Kaiser expired in September 2018. In December, thousands of NUHW workers engaged in a statewide strike over similar concerns about patient wait times.

“We’re fighting to make Kaiser provide quality mental health care,” said Matt Hannon, a Kaiser psychologist in South San Francisco. “Our patients can’t get timely appointments, and our schedules are booked solid.”

Kaiser facilities will remain open during the strike, a Kaiser spokeswoman said. Kaiser patients who have appointments with mental health clinicians scheduled for next week should plan to keep those appointments unless contacted by Kaiser to inform them otherwise, she said. Physicians, managers and non-unionized contract mental health workers will staff the appointments.

“It is disappointing that, once again, the leadership of the National Union of Healthcare Workers is calling on our mental health therapists to walk away from their patients,” Kaiser Vice President of Communications John Nelson said in a statement. “This planned strike does not make sense given that we’re offering generous wages and benefits that will keep our therapists among the best compensated in Californian ... and have taken important steps to help address the nation’s crisis in mental health care — hiring hundreds of new therapists, building new treatment facilities, and investing $40 million to help people enter the mental health care profession.”


In 2013, Kaiser faced a $4 million fine by the California Department of Managed Health Care for inadequate patient access to mental health treatment. In 2017, the agency again criticized Kaiser for delays in behavioral health treatment but did not issue another fine.

By Catherine Ho -sfchronicle.com

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

L.A. will rename Rodeo Road as Obama Boulevard in tribute to former president

The Los Angeles City Council voted to rename Rodeo Road as Obama Boulevard in honor of former President Obama, Mayor Eric Garcetti announced in a tweet Tuesday night. “We’re thrilled that Angelenos and visitors will forever be reminded of the legacy of President @BarackObama when traveling across L.A.,” he said in the tweet. City Council President Herb Wesson  proposed the name change in June 2017. Los Angeles is renaming Rodeo Rd. to Obama Boulevard in honor of former president Barack Obama. pic.twitter.com/UwzXxU6tHA — AJ+ (@ajplus) August 29, 2018 Not to be confused with the upscale Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills, Rodeo Road is a 3.5-mile street that runs from near the Culver City border east to Mid-City. In his proposal, Wesson  noted that  Obama held a campaign rally at Rancho Cienega Park on Rodeo Road when running for president and that the area already has streets named after presidents, such as George Washington and Thomas Jefferson. It’s offic...

Why Christopher Reeve's ''Superman' Is So Hard to Leave in the Past

#ChristopherReeve #Clarkkent #DCcomics #LoisLane #RichardDonner #Superman Forty years ago, Richard Donner and Christopher Reeve made a Superhero film that directors have been chasing for years, depicting who America was then — or at least who we wished to be Superman. It’s now easy to believe a man can fly. It wasn’t in 1978, but today, in midst of an explosion of superhero movies, it’s a belief we give into with relative ease. Flight is most often the bare minimum of what we expect from heroes and villains who can perform any feat limited only by the human imagination. It’s not simply special effects that permit our belief, but rather an overall acceptance that these costume-clad characters are a defining part of our culture, modern myths at their best and populist cinematic staples akin to the 20th century western at their lowest form. There have been a record nine theatrically released superhero movies based on comic books this year alone, each claiming a major piece of the glo...

Valio La Pena (Salsa Version) Marc Anthony (video)

#MarcAnthony #Music #Salsa #ValioLaPena  Vídeo oficial de Marc Anthony de su tema 'Valio La Pena (Salsa Version) Valio La Pena [Salsa Version]" by and Jose Luis/salgado Pagan. Mirándote a los ojos se responden mi por qué Me inspiro en tus palabras y mi casa esta en tu piel Que tierno amor, mi devoción, viniste a ser mi religión Mi dulce sentimiento de nada me arrepiento Que vivan los momentos en tu boca y en tu cuerpo Mujer Valió la pena lo que era necesario para estar contigo amor Tu eres una bendición Las horas y la vida de tu lado nena Están para vivirlas pero a tu manera Enhorabuena, porque valió la pena Valió la pena Valió la pena lo que era necesario para estar contigo amor Tu eres una bendición Las horas y la vida de tu lado nena Están para vivirlas pero a tu manera Enhorabuena, porque valió la pena Valió la pena, valió la pena Valió la pena, nena Te veo y me convenzo que tenias que llegar Después de la tormenta aquí en tu pe...