I grew up about 45 minutes from Boston. Before I left, we had a vote on safe nurse to patient ratios. Watching what's happening now at Mass General Brigham and their home care division, it's all flying back to me.
Nurse strikes aren't rare anymore. And how a health system communicates through one outlasts whatever number ends up in the contract. Boston just handed us a live case study in what to do, and what not to do. Let's talk about it.
450 MGB Home Care clinicians voted to unionize back in March 2025. By November, the Massachusetts Nurses Association was in formal contract talks with Brigham and Women's Hospital on behalf of 4,000 hospital nurses. In May 2026, home care clinicians authorized a 7-day strike, 92% in favor. The Governor got involved in early July. No deal.
Then it got messy. Hospital nurses walked out for one planned day. Home care clinicians started their own 7-day strike the same morning. And when the 1-day strikers showed up to return to their shifts, MGB locked them out for four more days, citing a contractual minimum with the travel nurses they'd brought in to cover.
The union's case is patient safety and fair pay: they're pointing at $35.9 million in combined executive comp against a proposed 0% base increase, and asking why they should pay more for the health insurance they administer every day.
MGB's case is math: the union's proposal adds $128 million in annual labor costs, a 19% wage hike that would push nursing compensation toward half the entire labor budget. They'll also tell you their step increases and benefits already make them one of the highest-paying employers in the market.
Both of those things can be true. That's not really the story I want to tell here, though.
Forget the dollar figures for a second. The decision that did the most reputational damage wasn't a bargaining position. It was the lockout.
Nurses who honored their one-day commitment showed up to go back to work and were told no, not yet, four more days. From an operations standpoint, I get it: you sign a 5-day minimum with the agency supplying 1,300 travel nurses, or you don't get the coverage. That's a real constraint.
But nobody outside of ops experiences it that way. What they see is nurses who did exactly what they said they'd do, being kept off the floor anyway. That's the gap between "operationally necessary" and "how it lands." And it's the gap almost every health system trips on during a labor dispute.
There's a detail in one of the videos circulating from the strike where you can hear someone shout "Code Blue OB." If you've spent any time in healthcare, you know what that phrase does to your stomach.
Multiply that by a workforce of travel nurses who don't know the unit, don't know the patients, and weren't there yesterday. That's not a talking point. That's a real fear, and it's the one the union doesn't have to manufacture.
We've seen this movie before, and some health systems have handled it well.
Kaiser, 2023. 75,000 workers, the largest healthcare labor action in the country, and it still ended in a place both sides could live with. Part of why: Kaiser didn't dispute the staffing shortage. They acknowledged it, and they framed the contract as a retention play, not a concession. They didn't badmouth their own workforce on the way to the table.
Providence, 2025. A 47-day strike across multiple states, and their comms strategy is genuinely worth studying. They published FAQs for anxious patients and families, plainly written, regularly updated. And they published something for their own staff too, publicly accessible, addressed directly to the people walking the picket line. The union published their own FAQ right alongside it. Nobody was left guessing.
Notice what both of those have in common. Neither one tried to win the news cycle. They tried to keep people informed, and they treated their own workforce like an audience worth talking to, not just a bargaining counterparty.
If you're the marketing or comms lead sitting across from a labor dispute, here's what I'd actually put on a checklist:
UMass Memorial, the other major Massachusetts health system, is heading toward its own strike right now. This is a pattern, not an anomaly. And most health systems still don't have a real plan for it until they're already living it.
If you're in healthcare marketing or comms, this is worth building into your crisis playbook now, while it's hypothetical. Because the next time it isn't, you won't have time to figure it out on the fly.