St Leonards Seagull
Well-known member
- Jul 10, 2012
- 554
How do you both feel about the shortage of nurses and how that is affecting patient care?I'm an ex-nurse. My husband's an NHS nurse still. Neither of us believe this strike is justified or fair. Nursing has never been a highly paid job, it's hard work, and you have to do and see nasty stuff sometimes. You don't join the profession to earn loads of cash or for an easy life, but it has other, immense, rewards. I'm not politically minded, they're all tits, and God knows whose or what's fault it is that we find ourselves as a nation in the state we're in now (although I have my own suspicions). Most ordinary, working people are suffering to a greater or lesser degree at present, most people can do little to alleviate it. Those nurses who are choosing to strike are basically holding everyone else to ransom. If every nurse in the country gets a 17% pay rise, then the rest of us are royally f***ed, its just not affordable. Playing the "woe is me, I'm an NHS hero, don't you know" card is frankly a bit nauseating in my opinion.
I didn’t vote to strike, but I can understand why some have, we need to attract more nurses and retain the ones we have.
I’ve never seen so many experienced nurses leave as I have in the past few years, a lot of their reasoning is that they just can’t take the stress caused by not being able to provide adequate care.
The newly qualified nurses I really feel for, having mentored quite a few over the years, they come out of university and pretty much shell shocked at what they’re confronted with. Just thrown in the deep end with very few experienced nurse’s available for support.
It’s a bit of a horror show, if nothing else it will hopefully provide a window for people to see whats happening.