Kaiser nurses say AI, surveillance are making their jobs and patient care worse
12 hours ago
- #Workplace Surveillance
- #Nurse Advocacy
- #Healthcare AI
- Kaiser Permanente nurses report workplace surveillance, including AI monitoring call length, empathy, and tone, threatening patient care and nurse autonomy.
- Nurses face performance criticism for calls over 15 minutes, affecting scores and leading to pressure, potentially causing burnout, early retirement, or reduced compassion.
- California Nurses Association is negotiating a new contract with Kaiser, addressing AI concerns, while state lawmakers consider bills to regulate workplace AI and protect workers.
- Kaiser defends AI use for patient safety, denying call time metrics for performance assessment, but nurses cite examples where efficiency goals compromise care quality.
- Patient advocates link time pressures to broader Kaiser cost-cutting patterns, noting historical fines for delayed care and concerns that AI prioritizes profits over patients.
- AI surveillance in call centers increases stress and emotional exhaustion among nurses, with studies showing algorithmic management lowers job satisfaction and raises error risks.
- Unions are pushing for transparency and worker input on AI deployments, with Kaiser nurses campaigning against tools like empathy detectors and seeking contractual protections.
- Kaiser uses AI beyond call centers, for tasks like patient risk assessment and discharge decisions, raising concerns about automation fragmenting nursing and reducing human touch.
- California legislation, such as SB 947, aims to require employer notification of AI use and protect healthcare workers from retaliation for overriding automated recommendations.
- Nurses argue surveillance turns them into "automatons," stifling professional judgment and compassion, ultimately undermining the core purpose of nursing and patient trust.