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The Monitor is available online. Go to www.1199seiu.org and click on “professional workers.” the monitor 1199 SEIU Professional & Technical Newsletter October 2011 IN THIS ISSUE: · Dietitians Expand their Clinical Role and Support Licensure Bill · 1199 Social Workers Win Recognition for Their Clinical Work · Hospital Ambulance Services Saved from Attack! · Challenges for Professional Staff in Changing World of Long-Term Care · Hospital Pharmacists Expand Scope of Practice in New York State · Legislative Update · Academic Calendar 1199 Social Workers Win Recognition for Their Clinical Work FIND US ON FACEBOOK Enter: 1199 SEIU Pro Tech

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1199 SEIU Professional & Technical Newsletter October 2011 1199 Social Workers Win Recognition for Their Clinical Work

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The Monitor is available online. Go to www.1199seiu.org and click on “professional workers.”

the monitor1199 SEIU Professional & Technical Newsletter October 2011

IN THIS ISSUE:·Dietitians Expand their Clinical Role and Support Licensure Bill

· 1199 Social Workers Win Recognition for Their Clinical Work

·Hospital Ambulance Services Saved from Attack!

· Challenges for Professional Staff in Changing World of Long-Term Care

·Hospital Pharmacists Expand Scope of Practice in New York State

· Legislative Update

· Academic Calendar

1199 Social Workers Win Recognition for Their Clinical Work

FIND US ONFACEBOOKEnter: 1199 SEIU Pro Tech

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ietitians and Nutritionists are an integral part of the multidisciplinary healthcare team. However, for too many years they were erroneously seen as dietary

workers whose main responsibilities were to modify menus and count calories. Today their critical role is finally starting to be recognized.

In order to become a Registered Dietitian (RD) one must obtain a Bachelor’s degree plus a one-year internship in a clinical setting consisting of inpatient, outpatient, commu-nity and food service rotations prior to taking the certifi-cation exam. While a Bachelor’s is the minimum degree requirement for this profession, many RDs also complete their Master’s degree. The American Dietetic Association (ADA) is now asking that RDs create professional portfo-lios, citing specific goals. The ADA monitors these portfo-lios and requires that the RDs submit 75 CEUs (continuing

educational credits) every 5 years. These credits must be pre-approved and target one or more areas of expertise. Examples include Diabetic Educator, Neonatal Nutrition-ist or Weight Loss Specialist.

In a clinical setting dietitians often treat people who are very ill or have multiple conditions. There are certain diseases and criteria that indicate high risk factors for malnutrition. Dietitians assess a patient’s nutritional status and make recommendations on the most effective dietary treatment. This can include nutrition therapy, counseling, and the use of specialized nutrition supplements for long term management to promote optimal nutritional health.

Several recently published studies have found that people seen by dietitians tend to have better outcomes, particu-larly those with diabetes or kidney disease. “We are profes-

Dietitians Expand their Clinical Role and Support Licensure Bill

Mental Health Practitioners at 1199 meeting

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Left to Right: Maimonides Registered Dietitians Inessa Falina, Anna Nabutovskaya, and Lori Levine

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sional food educators. We provide medical nutritional therapy.” states Anna Nabutovskaya, RD and CDE (certified diabetes educator) of Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn.

Her colleagues, all Registered Dietitians, share that sentiment. “Many people call themselves ‘nutritionist,’ but they don’t have the education or skill levels that we have. We are the experts,” states Lori Levine RD, CDN, Adult/Childhood Weight Specialist.

Over the past 20 years, Maimonides Medical Center has under-gone a tremendous expansion to include multiple specialty areas and sub-units that require the expertise of clinical dietitians. These include the ICU, the Cancer Center, the Vent Unit, the Stroke Unit, and the Mental Health Unit. Servicing a patient population that is multicultural and multilingual requires ad-ditional knowledge about different dietary needs and food prefer-ences. The Dietitians must be able to create, translate and update their educational materials to fit this diverse population.

The Dietitians also provide comprehensive education to nutrition interns as well as training to new residents and medical staff. In addition, they participate in interdisciplinary rounds as part of the Nutrition Committee, the Wound Care Committee, and the Dia-betic Task Force. “The last few years have shown good positive changes here at MMC for our profession. We are no longer viewed as members of the food service department, but as respected, es-sential experts in our field,” says Rivka Langer RD, CDN.

Today there is much conversation and renewed excitement sur-rounding a proposed bill that would offer licensure to Registered Dietitians. “We are very excited about supporting this bill,” states Inessa Falina RD. “We have to protect our profession for future generations. We are one of the lowest paid professions in the healthcare industry and licensure is one way we can unite indus-try-wide to fight for better wages to insure that people will want to pursue this field of work in the future. It is also a way to stand with other licensed professionals and get long overdue recognition as valued members of the healthcare team.”

There is an abundance of pride and passion amongst the MMC dietitians. They are passionate about their profession, and em-brace the daily challenges. The passage of the proposed licensure bill would give them the respect and recognition they deserve.

“We have to protect our profession for future generations.”

Inessa Falina, Maimonides Registered Dietitian

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1199 Social Workers Win Recognition for Their Clinical Work

Pictured here: Esther Mendoza, formerly oncology social worker, presently working in the psychiatric E.R.

Cover Photo from Left to Right: Montefiore Social Workers Bruni Matos, Erin Lauinger, Emily Dorfman, and Esther Mendoza.

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ver the last few years, 1199 social workers and their allies in the broader social work com-munity have worked successfully to expand the social work experience defined as clinical that allows one to sit for the Licensed Clinical Social Work (LCSW) exam in New

York. When New York implemented social work licensing nine years ago, it established two levels of credentials, the Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) and the Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW), the highest credential in the state, which can only be achieved with a certain amount of clinical experience. Since that time, amendments had passed that greatly restricted this clinical experience to mental health therapy within an institution or private practice. 1199 social workers and their allies argued that there are many other social work settings in which they use clinical skills, often extensively. The State Board of Social Work has heard them, and is now ex-panding its definition of clinical social work to settings outside of mental health.

In particular, 1199 social workers from Montefiore and from St. Luke’s submitted scenarios to the State Board of Social Work detailing the incredibly varied and complex world of medical social work. These descriptions played a major role in changing how the State defined clinical experi-ence. Thus, 1199 social workers can be proud that their efforts contributed to making the LCSW more broadly available to qualified social workers in all settings.

“The family is important because that’s the patient’s support.” Bruni Matos, Homecare Social Worker at Montefiore Medical Center (above)

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When speaking with the social workers, it quickly became clear that medical social work is a rich and complex profes-sion. At Montefiore Erin Lauinger is a pediatric transplant social worker and Emily Dorfman is a liver transplant social worker. “When you have a chronic illness, you need the patient to be motivated to deal with and handle the illness,” said Lauinger. “Their mental health is important in dealing with their physical health.” Dorfman added that many of her patients have a “tremendous amount of post-traumatic stress” from learning about their illness and going through the transplant procedure. Both of them stressed the impor-tance of working with the families. “It’s all about engag-ing,” Lauinger added. “Once you can engage, then you open the door to a clinical relationship with the patient and the family.”

Until recently, Esther Mendoza was an oncology social worker at Montefiore. While she is now working in the psychiatric ER, she will reference her oncology experience when applying for the LCSW because this experience “was as clinical as my work now.” Mendoza worked with both newly diagnosed patients, those who were undergoing treat-ment, and those in hospice or palliative care. “I had long-term relationships with many of my patients,” she said.

Like her colleagues, Mendoza worked not only with the cancer patients but with their families, including their

1199 Social Workers Win More Flexibility in NY Licensing Law

children. “Children are the unheard voice in the cancer world,” she said. In one case, she worked with a mother suffering through a particularly difficult case of cancer whose 14-year-old boy was acting out at home and at school. By working with the family, Mendoza said she was able to help them speak openly about the illness. As a result, the son improved markedly in school.

At St. Luke’s Hospital, the two social workers who sub-mitted scenarios were Union delegate Elise Rackmill, now a school social worker who previously ran a sickle cell program, and Lorelei Fields, a medical social worker. Perhaps no one has worked as long and hard on this issue as Lorelei (see the Feb. 2009 issue of The Monitor). She went to countless meetings, including meetings of the State Social Work Board.

“It’s important for the profession not to disregard differ-ent types of clinical work. It’s important to acknowledge clinical work done in a variety of settings,” Fields said, adding that hospital social workers need “excellent inter-viewing skills, skills of engagement, and great skills for assessment.”

“I’m extremely happy to hear that our write-ups made such a difference,” she added. “Without 1199 we would not have had that voice.”

“Without 1199 we would not have had that voice.”Lorelei Fields, Medical Social Worker at St. Luke’s/Roosevelt Hospital (left)

“Good mental health affects good physical health.”Zoraida Torres, OB/GYN and Pediatric Outpatient Social Worker at Montefiore (right)

(continued)

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1199 Social Workers Win More Flexibility in NY Licensing Law

For 100 years, New York City’s voluntary hospitals have been providing us with ambulance services at no cost to the city. This saves our government millions of dollars a year that would otherwise come out of taxpayers’ pockets. But earlier this year, Mayor Bloomberg included in the 2012 budget a fee to voluntary hospitals for continuing to provide ambulance services. If approved, this fee would have resulted in staff shortages, higher taxes for hardworking New Yorkers and, scariest of all, fewer ambulances, meaning longer response times during emergencies.

Hospital Ambulance Services Saved from Attack!

say that in order to pay these fees, they would have had to reduce services elsewhere, in some instances discontinuing ambulance services altogether. Hospitals and 1199SEIU EMS members asked City Hall to reconsider this ill-conceived attempt to gener-ate money that could devastate our vulnerable health system.

“The city is saving millions of dollars with the help of the hospi-tals’ ambulance services—says retired paramedic Marvin Bethea. “It will cost them a lot more money to provide adequate staffing, purchase equipment and pay EMS worker salaries.”

Saved! Because of the hard work, lobbying and cooperative efforts of the 1199 SEIU Hospital Based EMS member Committee, the 1199 SEIU Professional Technical Department, the 1199 SEIU Politi-cal Action Department, The Greater New York Hospital Associa-tion (GNYHA), the New York City Council, and Mayor Bloom-berg’s office, a compromise was reached regarding the fees.

GNYHA has agreed to work with the City to develop cost saving and revenue generation through efficiencies that will benefit both the FDNY and hospitals. The cost saving initiatives are expected to save NYC over 9 million dollars a year. When the expected level of revenue generation is achieved, we are confident that the fees will be eliminated from the Fiscal Year 2013 budget, and will not be implemented in the Fiscal Year 2012 budget.

The Real FactsMayor Bloomberg had claimed that charging voluntary hospitals these fees would have helped close the city’s budget gap. But in truth it could have ended up costing taxpayers millions of dol-lars and worsened our financial crisis. If strug-gling hospitals would cease providing ambulance services, the associated costs would have been transferred to the city’s already strained bud-get at a greater expense. The Fire Department, which dispatches all Emergency Medical Ser-vices (EMS) workers in the 911 system, includ-ing those employed by the non-profit hospitals, would have been forced to pick up the slack by hiring hundreds of new EMS professionals and buying new ambulances.

Hospitals Rejected Proposed Dispatch FeeUnder the new budget, starting in 2012 some hospitals would have had to pay the city over $1 million to remain in this system. Many hospitals

1199 Paramedics and EMT’s meeting to discuss strategy

in opposing proposal to impose fees on

hospitals

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rofessional staff in nursing homes provides a range of important functions and services. Dietitians, LPNs, Physical, Occupational and Speech Therapists, Social Workers, Activities Leaders, and others are critical members of the interdisciplinary care teams that design and deliver individualized care and

treatments to elderly and physically disabled residents. Recent national and state reforms and regulations are creating unprecedented challenges for these dedicated staff. As the health care system is pressured to establish and expand community and home-based care programs, the number of hospital and nursing home beds is expected to decrease in the coming 5 years. It is anticipated that nursing homes will admit increasing num-bers of patients who either require short-term rehabilitation or long-term care for late-state dementia, pallia-tive care, chronic mental health and behavioral health issues, developmental disabilities and complex medical conditions. Incentives to reduce re-hospitalizations, demonstrate financial competitiveness and improve performance on quality measures will require professional and technical staff to add new skills to their already bulging tool kits.

Challenges for Professional Staff in Changing World of Long-Term Care

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Delmaliz Rodriguez, Cert. Occuptional Therapy Assistant, Daughters of Jacob Nursing Home, working with a patient

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tives may fall by the wayside; however there is also the belief that facilities will only survive if they enhance their commitment to individualized care expressed through culture change values.”

1199SEIU, the Training & Employment Funds and Institute for Continuing Education all strive to support professional and technical workers to succeed in their changing roles. Creating Professional Practice Com-mittees (PPCs) in each facility could be one approach. Ms. Rodriguez agrees: “The PPC can be useful for the professional and technical staff to have a say in what happens in the institution.”

Do you want to influence your institution’s leader-ship with your ideas of how to improve patient care? 1199SEIU’s Professional and Technical Department invites you to join with colleagues in forming a PCC in your facility. With support from 1199SEIU’s Profession-al & Technical Department staff, your Committee will be equipped with the resources and skills to work col-laboratively with other union members and management in resolving practice issues, improving care, and increas-ing staff satisfaction. To learn more about establishing a PPC within your institution, please contact Joseph Chinea, Professional/Technical Specialist, at 212-857-4302, or [email protected].

Janice Dabney, (lead consultant with the Labor Manage-ment Project, a department within the 1199SEIU Training & Employment Funds) predicts that “we will see fewer and smaller nursing homes. Staff will need to commu-nicate more effectively and efficiently both within their individual facility and across health care settings. Profes-sional and technical staff will need to enhance their criti-cal thinking, problem-solving skills in helping to create new systems and approaches to care. Documentation of evidence-based, data-supported interventions will help en-sure the success and continued viability of their facilities.”

The stresses that come with having to treat more patients along with additional documentation requirements affect all staff titles. Delmaliz Rodriguez, Occupational Ther-apy Assistant at Daughters of Jacob Nursing Home, can-didly shares her views: “The role of OTs (Occupational Therapists) has changed from providing quality therapy with minimal documentation, to spending less time with each patient due to increased caseloads and documenta-tion requirements. Therapists need to be more creative with treatment sessions in addressing residents’ function-al and adaptive needs.”

There is a perceived conflict between providing quality vs. quantity care. Ms. Dabney observes that “There is an increased danger that many person-centered care initia-

“There is an increased danger that many person-centeredcare initiatives may fall by the wayside”Janice Dabney, Labor Management Project, 1199SEIU Training & Employment Funds (above left)

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his May 17, Governor Cuomo signed into law the Collaborative Drug Therapy Management (CDTM) bill, which allows pharmacists who have

a written protocol with a physician “to modify and manage drug regimens, order and evaluate clinical laboratory tests related to the management of drug therapy, and order or perform other routine patient monitoring functions.” 1199 pharmacists, who played a significant role in get-ting this bill passed, applaud the increasingly active role it allows hospital pharmacists to play with patients. The current law restricts the responsibilities outlined by the bill to teaching hospitals and their outpatient clinics and diagnostic centers. The law is written as a demonstration project that will sunset in three years, at which time it will be evaluated. 1199 pharmacists are confident that the pro-gram will be a success that will eventually expand to other settings.

According to NYU clinical pharmacist Manny Horvitz, the CDTM law validates the direction the hospital’s pharmacy has been moving in over the last several years. “When I first started working at NYU over 25 years ago, the main job for the pharmacist was dispensing medica-tions,” he said. While he emphasized that this role and its

many responsibilities remain important to the profession, pharmacists are increasingly “directly involved with pa-tient care.” He explained that clinical pharmacists design and provide disease management programs based on epidemiological data and risk reduction strategies, and that the new legislation will allow this clinical role to expand.

According to Horvitz, 12 out of 70 pharmacists at NYU currently work as part of medical teams on the floors, and he expects this number to grow with the passage of CDTM. These medical teams include the attending MD, a resident, an NP, the clinical pharmacist, and occasion-ally others. These pharmacists “are involved with patient counseling, discharge counseling, drug reconciliation, and preventing duplication of medicines.” With the new legislation, they will also be responsible for medication assessments on patients, ordering tests, and adjusting drug regimens.

His colleague, Esther Adebayo-Olojo, a pharmacist at NYU since 1985 and also on the faculty at LIU, expects that the law “will give us a more active role with patients,” as well as “a more solid ground for teaching the pharma-cist to play a more clinical role.”

Hospital Pharmacists Expand Scope of Practice in New York State

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From Left, NYU Pharmacists Alicia Sammarco, Chetak Jain, Esther Adebayo-Olojo, Wulin Yu, and Manuel Horvitz

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Two of the earliest advocates of this legislation were 1199 pharmacists George DiBenedetto, who recently retired from Montefiore, and Suhail Khan, a pharmacist since 1971 pres-ently working at Northshore at Forest Hills. Khan agrees with Horvitz that the hospital pharmacy has evolved “from a purely dispensing profession to an active patient care profession.” He added that when he started there were 600 drugs on the mar-ket; now there are over 18,000, a difficult amount for doctors to manage on their own. “It’s impossible for the doctors to master all of these medications. The pharmacist is crucial.” DiBene-detto added: “The pharmacist is the drug expert. The number of drugs out there is increasing all the time. This legislation will allow the pharmacist to be an active part of the health care team. Before the pharmacist played a reactive role; now they can play an active role.”

Khan stressed that most doctors support this clinical role for pharmacists. He said that 121 attending MDs at his hospi-tal sent individualized letters supporting the passage of the CDTM legislation.

All of these pharmacists made the point that with those in their field increasingly playing a bigger role on the floors, the phar-macy technicians who work in the pharmacies will be left with more work and responsibility, leading to a greater demand for certification. The bottom line is that this is both good for the profession of pharmacy and for patient care. It will save costs, reduce adverse drug reactions, and improve patient outcomes.

“Before the pharmacist played a reactive role; now they can play an active role.”George DiBenedetto, Pharmacist retired from Montifiore

“It’s impossible for the doctors to master all of these medications. The pharmacist is crucial.”Suhail Khan, Pharmacist at Northshore at Forest Hills

Pharmacists:CDTM legislation for hospital pharmacists (see article in this issue).

Surgical Technicians: This bill passed both houses of the Legislature, but was vetoed by the Governor on September 23, 2011. This bill would have required that, going forward, hospitals could only employ nationally certified surgical techs. All those individuals who were employed as surgical technicians either on the effective date of the bill, or within two years prior to the effective date of the bill, would have been exempted from this requirement. Additionally, those surgical techs who received their training in the military would have been exempted from the certification requirement. However, this bill did not become law due to the Governor’s veto. 1199 will be consulting with the sponsors and the Governor’s office in order to work out the changes needed to allow this bill to become law at a future date. We will be keeping you informed. For further information on this issue contact Debora Hunte, Professional & Technical Specialist, at [email protected]., or at 212-857-4398.

Sleep Technicians: (also known as polysomnographic technicians) Legislation has passed and been signed into law that will require those technicians who work in sleep labs assisting in performing sleep studies to receive authorization from the New York State Education Department (SED). This authorization will serve as the equivalent of a license. Licensed respiratory therapists who work in sleep labs will not be required to attain such authorization (their respiratory license will suffice.)

While the legislation is written very generally as to the requirements, 1199 had been involved in

LEGISLATIVE UPDATELEGISLATIVE UPDATELEGISLATIVE UPDATE

(continues, next page)

2011 CONTINUING EDUCATION CALENDARSATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 9:00am – 5:00pm Neurological Disorders: Degenerative Diseases

6 hrs, Interdisciplinary**Location: The Times Center

ONSITE, LIVE VIDEOCAST, AND LIVE WEBCAST

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 5:30pm – 9:00pm Medications of Respiratory Therapy

3 hrs, Respiratory Therapists Location: Cherkasky/Davis Conference Center

ONSITE ONLY

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 5:30pm – 9:00pm Over Radiation Liabilities: Institutions and Practitioners

3 hrs, Imaging TechnologistsLocation: Cherkasky/Davis Conference Center

ONSITE ONLY

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 5:30pm – 9:00pm Medication Errors

3 hrs, Interdisciplinary: Pharmacists and Pharmacy Technicians, Nurses, Physicians and Physician Assistants

Location: Cherkasky/Davis Conference CenterONSITE, LIVE VIDEOCAST, AND LIVE WEBCAST

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 7:45am – 3:30pm Palliative Care

6 hrs, Interdisciplinary**Location: The Times Center

ONSITE, LIVE VIDEOCAST, AND LIVE WEBCAST

SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 8:45am – 4:30pm AIDS at “30”: Evolution of an Epidemic

6 hrs, Interdisciplinary**Location: The Times Center

ONSITE, LIVE VIDEOCAST, AND LIVE WEBCAST

SATURDAY, MARCH 3, 7:45am – 3:30pm Cystic Fibrosis, Pulmonary Disease

6 hrs, Interdisciplinary**Location: The Times Center

ONSITE, LIVE VIDEOCAST, AND LIVE WEBCAST

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 8:45am – 4:30pmGeriatrics

6 hrs, Interdisciplinary**Location: The Times Center

ONSITE, LIVE VIDEOCAST, AND LIVE WEBCAST

1199 SEIU League Training & Upgrading Fund Institute For Continuing Education

** Interdisciplinary seminars are usually accredited for Physicians, Pharmacists and Pharmacy Techs, Physician Assistants, Nurse Practitioners, Respiratory Therapists, Radiologic Techs, Dieticians, RNs and LPNs, Social Workers, Clinical Laboratory Practi-tioners, Rehab Therapists (OTs and PTs), CASACs. Please call for specific professions.

Register today. Call: 212-894-4390Please call for specific location on each seminar. Email: Institute @1199Funds.orgwww.1199Funds.org - click “Training & Employment,” and then on “Continuing Education.”

1199SEIU Professional & Technical Department Staff Listing and Areas of Responsibility:Dolores Chase - Imaging, Respiratory, EMS Workers, Medical Records Coders -- 212-261-2385, [email protected] Chinea - Social Work, Substance Abuse Counselors, OT/PT/Speech -- 212-857-4302, , [email protected] Hargett - LPN’s, Physician Assistants, Dietitians -- 212-261-2246 - [email protected] Hunte - Laboratory, Pharmacy, Surgical Technicians, Central Sterile Technicians -- 212-857-4398, [email protected] Kranz, Director - All other professions not mentioned above -- 212-261-2494, [email protected]

talks with SED to negotiate prior legislation on this issue which spelled out specifically both the requirements, and the grandfathering provisions for existing sleep techs. We have been assured by SED that they will follow these provisions in their regulation of this profession.

The requirements to receive the authorization will be to complete an associate level program either in polysomnography, or an equivalent acceptable to the

department, and to pass an exam. Those techs who are presently nationally certified in polysomnography and have practiced at least 18 months in the last 3 years as of the effective date of this act will be able to receive the authorization without taking the exam. Additionally, any sleep tech who has worked under a licensed physician for at least 3 years in the last 5 will be able to receive authorization without taking the exam. The continuing education requirement for all sleep techs will be 24 continuing education credits every three years. For further information on this issue contact Dolores Chase, Professional & Technical Specialist at [email protected], or call her at 212-261-2385.

LEGISLATIVE UPDATELEGISLATIVE UPDATE(continued)