I picked this report from the Daily Independent.
The Nurses are angry over the ongoing strike by doctors.
National Association of Nigeria
Nurses and Midwives (NANNM) has described the ongoing nationwide strike by
members of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) as selfish, unethical and
illegal.
NANNM also alleged that
the strike was a well calculated and orchestrated plan by the doctors to divert
patients to their private clinics to milk them of their hard earned resources.
NANNM stated this in a
statement by its General Secretary, Yusuf-Badmus, in Abuja on Sunday.
The group advised the
Federal Government to “stop all government employed doctors from establishing
private clinics for the benefit of the citizens of this nation while still in
government employment”.
“The government should
have a rethink on the undue attention they give them and do what is right.
“The government should
revert to the era when administrators administered the hospitals/health
facilities while health professionals, including doctors do their professional
duties that they are being paid for.”
The group further
advocated that all government health workers should have unified salary scales.
“Difference should be
entry/exit points and professional/peculiar allowances of the different cadres
of workers.
“This will go a long
way in checking and preventing unhealthy rivalry and end to the incessant
strike action, that leaves the innocent patient to suffer.”
The nurses, therefore,
encouraged patients to attend and patronise the hospitals despite the current
strike.
This, according to
them, is because “other health professionals such as skilled midwives, the
accident and emergency (A & E) nurses, intensive care nurses, orthopaedic
nurses paediatric nurses, including the medical laboratory scientists, medical
record officers, the radiographers, the physiotherapists and pharmacists, are
on ground to attend to their health needs, even when the medical practitioners
embark on their selfish and illegal strike; selfish in the sense that they are
using the strike to force the Federal Government to stop the implementation of
agreements and memorandum of understanding reached between JOHESU/APHA and
Federal Government spanning between 2009 to date”.
The nurses again
condemned what they described as “the unethical behaviour or practice of
medical practitioners whereby in-patients are compulsorily discharged against
their wish whenever NMA calls for industrial action.
“NMA does this to make
it appear to the public and the press that the patients left the hospital
because doctors are on strike.
“The public at large
must be made to know that most in-patients are in the hospital for
comprehensive healthcare (physical and psychological) and are being taken care
of by the nurses and other health professionals, except those that have been
booked for surgical procedures or surgical operation.
“The medical
practitioner, therefore, has no moral or ethical justification to compulsorily
force them (in-patients) out of the hospital to make the hospital empty because
doctors are on strike,” NANNM insisted.
But while the nurses
were tongue-lashing the doctors, the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) under the
leadership of Governor Jonah Jang of Plateau State called on the NMA to end its
current strike for the sake of the lives the doctors have sworn to save.
In a statement released
in Abuja at the weekend by Secretary of the Forum, Osaro Onaiwu, Jang begged
the leadership of the NMA to remember their Hippocratic oath “as the strike is
devastating the lives of the poor in our nation who can only afford medical
care in government owned medical facilities”.
The statement reminded
the striking doctors that their friends and families are not immune from the
effects of the strike, as anybody can fall ill or be involved in an emergency
at anytime and anywhere in the country.
The statement then called
on the doctors to end the strike on humanitarian grounds and engage in honest
dialogue with the Federal Government to stop the pain and suffering being
inflicted on Nigerians by their action.
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