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**MEDIA ADVISORY FOR NOV. 13 AT NOON** 

Contact: Andrea Penman-Lomeli | press@nysna.org | 347-559-3169  
Kristi Barnes | press@nysna.org | 646-853-4489 

 

NYSNA NURSES HOLD WEEK OF ACTION TO DEMAND PRIVATE HOSPITALS PROTECT HEALTHCARE FOR NEW YORKERS  

 

From Manhattan to Brooklyn, NYSNA Nurses Speak Out for Safe Patient Care  

Nurses Launch Website nychospitalgreed.com to Expose How NYC Private Hospitals Put Profits Over Patients

 

New York, N.Y. - On Thursday, Nov. 13, New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA) nurses will continue their second week of action to demand that NYC private hospitals invest in safe, patient care rather than executive pay and risky speculations on artificial intelligence. CEOs at Montefiore, Mount Sinai and NewYork-Presbyterian now make, on average, nearly 12,000 percent more than the registered nurses on the frontlines caring for patients. And Mount Sinai recently shelled out a whopping $100 million on just one AI facility. The bottom line: NYC’s private hospitals can afford to put patients first.  

Amidst looming federal healthcare cuts, nurses and allies call on our city’s private sector hospitals to do their part to protect New York patients.  

WHAT: Nurses Care for New York week of action to defend safe patient care

WHO: Hundreds of NYSNA nurses and allies, including Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso; Senator José Serrano; Assembly Members Rodneyse Bichotte, Micah Lasher, and Claire Valdez; City Council Members Mercedes Narcisse, Crystal Hudson, Keith Powers, Julie Menin, Gale Brewer, Susan Zhuang, Farah Louis, and Council Member-Elect Kayla Santosuousso; New York City Central Labor Council Secretary Treasurer Janella Hinds; Metro New York Health Care for All; and Arc of Justice

WHEN/WHERE:  

Nov. 13 Maimonides Medical Center at 12 p.m., 4802 10th Ave, Brooklyn

Nov. 13 Mount Sinai Main at 12 p.m., 1425 Madison Ave., New York

NYSNA nurses and healthcare professionals have mobilized to protect healthcare across our state ahead of the Trump administration’s impending healthcare cuts. If Trump’s cuts proceed, the number of uninsured New Yorkers will likely increase by over a million, health insurance premiums could go up for all, and New York could lose billions in federal healthcare funding. Nurses demand that private hospitals do their part to protect healthcare for New Yorkers.

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The New York State Nurses Association represents more than 42,000 members in New York State. We are New York’s largest union and professional association for registered nurses. NYSNA is an affiliate of National Nurses United, AFL-CIO, the country's largest and fastest-growing union and professional association of registered nurses, with more than 225,000 members nationwide.