Yes, nurses fault, not Tory fault.I just feel so sorry for the patients who had chemotherapy or radiotherapy booked on the strike dates and it had to be postponed at short notice. It's playing with people's lives.
If they can afford to strike and have a day watching Loose Women or whatever without pay, then they can't be that badly off. My older sister is a nurse and refused to strike because she cares very deeply for her patients.
Yes, running the NHS into the ground is indeed playing with people's lives. Perhaps the government should pay the NHS a fair wage? Just an idea.I just feel so sorry for the patients who had chemotherapy or radiotherapy booked on the strike dates and it had to be postponed at short notice. It's playing with people's lives.
Oh wow, you've gone full stupid.If they can afford to strike and have a day watching Loose Women or whatever without pay, then they can't be that badly off.
Ah, so now you're accusing the NHS (who just got us through covid at risk to their own lives) of not caring about patients. Genius.My older sister is a nurse and refused to strike because she cares very deeply for her patients.
I'm sure you are fully aware of the reasons why they have been pushed in to such drastic action ? Too important to strike but not important enough to pay properly. .oh, and the strike would not have gone ahead had Rishi agreed to talks. ...Hay ho, Rishi's only political agenda is to try to turn the population against Unions, and by extension, the Labour Party. So, address your concerns to him.I just feel so sorry for the patients who had chemotherapy or radiotherapy booked on the strike dates and it had to be postponed at short notice. It's playing with people's lives.
If they can afford to strike and have a day watching Loose Women or whatever without pay, then they can't be that badly off. My older sister is a nurse and refused to strike because she cares very deeply for her patients.
Have a little read of thisI just feel so sorry for the patients who had chemotherapy or radiotherapy booked on the strike dates and it had to be postponed at short notice. It's playing with people's lives.
If they can afford to strike and have a day watching Loose Women or whatever without pay, then they can't be that badly off. My older sister is a nurse and refused to strike because she cares very deeply for her patients.
Inform yourself. Chemo and radiotherapy went ahead.I just feel so sorry for the patients who had chemotherapy or radiotherapy booked on the strike dates and it had to be postponed at short notice. It's playing with people's lives.
If they can afford to strike and have a day watching Loose Women or whatever without pay, then they can't be that badly off. My older sister is a nurse and refused to strike because she cares very deeply for her patients.
If they can afford to strike and have a day watching Loose Women or whatever without pay, then they can't be that badly off. My older sister is a nurse and refused to strike because she cares very deeply for her patients.
My NHS nurse wife won’t be striking and she didn’t vote. It’s not political for her and she’s not against the strikers one jot. But she just wants to spend every shift helping the sick, the old and less experienced colleagues.I know three nurses, and they pretty much all have said the same. I suppose it's because they are empathic by nature, they said, everyone is feeling the pinch at the moment, so we just need to dig deep again, as harming other humans is just not on our agendas.
But I'm not saying that. Yes, they deserve FAR more pay and all the nurses I have spoken to have refused to strike. It's sod's law we get the worse start to winter for over 30 years with the temperatures at the moment.Yes, nurses fault, not Tory fault.
God bless her, I would love to give her a rise.My NHS nurse wife won’t be striking and she didn’t vote. It’s not political for her and she’s not against the strikers one jot. But she just wants to spend every shift helping the sick, the old and less experienced colleagues.
Jesus, I knew the NHS had been run down, but it sounds like the staff are as fragile as the patients.My NHS nurse wife won’t be striking and she didn’t vote. It’s not political for her and she’s not against the strikers one jot. But she just wants to spend every shift helping the sick, the old and less experienced colleagues.
Where did I say that they don't care about patients? They have to make their point. It's just terribly unfortunate it's coincided with bad weather, rail strikes and hospital letters stuck in the post.Yes, running the NHS into the ground is indeed playing with people's lives. Perhaps the government should pay the NHS a fair wage? Just an idea.
Oh wow, you've gone full stupid.
Ah, so now you're accusing the NHS (who just got us through covid at risk to their own lives) of not caring about patients. Genius.
I'm sorry but it is not sod's law. It's not even pure incompetence, we now have a ridiculous unelected third attempt at Johnson's cabal in Government, and having forced thousands into small boats across the channel, they will now stop any agreements with the Unions (see the last minute change to the rail worker's negotiations) in order to keep focus away from their incompetence, backhanders and simple basic and stupid corruption).But I'm not saying that. Yes, they deserve FAR more pay and all the nurses I have spoken to have refused to strike. It's sod's law we get the worse start to winter for over 30 years with the temperatures at the moment.
Pretty much what all the nurses I know have said. Didn’t vote or voted against it and will not be striking.My NHS nurse wife won’t be striking and she didn’t vote. It’s not political for her and she’s not against the strikers one jot. But she just wants to spend every shift helping the sick, the old and less experienced colleagues.