PORT WASHINGTON, N.Y. — When thousands of New York City nurses walked off the job last month in the city's largest strike of its kind in decades, 9-year-old Logan Coyle was a patient in the cancer unit at NewYork-Presbyterian's children's hospital in Manhattan.
Logan was recovering from his latest setback in a two-year battle with advanced liver cancer that has already included chemotherapy and a complex triple transplant of a liver, pancreas and small intestine.
But as the nurses formed their picket outside the hospital, he walked to his window and held up a handmade sign: ''Proud of My Primaries.''
Morgan Bieler, one of Logan's longtime, primary nurses, said the sight was a jolt of encouragement in those early, uncertain hours of the walkout, which, at the outset, involved roughly 15,000 nurses across some of the city's most prestigious hospitals.
''In that moment, it kind of reinforced like, ‘This is why we're doing this','' she said recently. ''If he can fight for as long as he has and as hard as he has, then we could fight this.''
But nearly a month on, more than 4,000 nurses in the NewYork-Presbyterian system are the last on the picket line.
Jeff Coyle, Logan's father, says it's ''infuriating'' that some of the city's most vulnerable patients are caught in the middle of the bitter dispute over salaries, staffing levels, workplace safety, health care and other contractual issues.
''Every single day that this drags on is a severe impact to us," he said. "We are the collateral damage of this strike.''