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  1. Ah yes, a bit like Radio NZ, eh Bomber…

    Sadly it seems to be the current zeitgeist that dissenters be shut down; be they unionists, free thinkers or Palestinians.

    The word ‘offensive’ is used as the catch-all of every tinpot dictator.

  2. More signs of death of democracy and unions being broken from above and within.

    In addition there is also death of experience and qualifications that is rampant in NZ.

    AKA downgrading professions and duties, such as the rise of positions like healthcare assistants (HCAs) who are apparently being offered a 11% pay rise while nurses are being offered 1.4 percent. With inflation the nurse offer will fall below inflation in particular if it is for 4 years.

    Neoliberals are determined to get rid of equal pay, in favour of ‘pay equity’ aka paying unqualified people the same as qualified people.

    The down grading of care has occurred in particular with aged care, when it has become the norm to staff facilities without a registered nurse on site but with ‘assistants’ and carers. Aged care nurses are paid less than hospital nurses and funny enough, aged care facilities struggle to recruit nurses, so recruit from overseas so they can keep paying less! Don’t worry, the taxpayers then top up the wages for them with WFF, accommodation supplement, wage top ups and residency. Keeps those Ryman profits high!

    Turning to less qualified staff, undermines the quality of care for residents and patients. Nurse assistants are not trained or able to do the same as nurses, so patients must wait until someone qualified is available. Which increasingly takes a long time and patients are in pain and die or get worse and stay sick longer.

    It is a far better use for society to train good nurse assistants into qualified nurses to staff facilities, rather than have so many unqualified people nursing around vulnerable people and making mistakes.

    I spent time in hospital and the nurses seem to do the bulk of the care. However there were nursing assistants who seemed to be a waste of money. They seemed more an agency rort, put on at night (where most of the deaths occur and out of sight) and they actually seemed to do nothing (the odd chamber pot), The nurse on call had to do everything while often translating on their behalf.

    Using more and more unqualified people to care for others might look good on paper to neoliberals, but it is part of the problem of poorer care in NZ and nurses becoming an increasingly unfashionable and stressful profession.

    Likewise hygiene and cleaning in hospitals is vitally important. 18%+ of all deaths in hospital occur from being in the hospital itself. It is no surprise that the rise in contract cleaning of hospitals has also resulted in a rise in necrotizing fasciitis and hospital infections. Again 100 years ago, nurses did the cleaning themselves and didn’t outsource it. Since it is so important to patient care and wellbeing, I struggle to see how this should be given away as cleaning is such a high contributing factor to hospital success rates.

    During the time I was in hospital nobody cleaned under my bed, or any of the tables beside me. Basic hygiene is not present in hospitals anymore as it’s someone else job and thus falls through the cracks.

    Nurse Jenny, the NZ nurse working for the NHS has now quit. Lke Boris, Jacinda might find that nurses require more than the insulting ‘clap for carers’ and a pat on the back. To keep NZ’s high standards we need to ensure that nurse earn enough money from their nursing roles to recruit and retain local nurses, rather than relying on immigration Ponzi’s that eventually like all Ponzi’s, burst.

    Same thing with doctors. They just spent 10 – 18 years studying to get where they are. They need a pay packet that offers reward as well as respect!

  3. For anyone interested in health care, this is a great series to watch. On Netflix currently.

    New Amsterdam.

    New Amsterdam follows Dr. Max Goodwin as he becomes the medical director of one of the United States’ oldest public hospitals, aiming to reform the neglected facility by tearing up its bureaucracy to provide exceptional care to patients.

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