Keep Our NHS Public - meeting
TomU | 07.01.2007 18:05 | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements
Keep Our NHS Public
Public Meeting, Thursday 8th Feb, 7.30pm
Nottingham Mechanics Institute
North Sherwood Street
Public Meeting, Thursday 8th Feb, 7.30pm
Nottingham Mechanics Institute
North Sherwood Street
Organise to stop sackings and cuts
YA BASTA!
Nottingham University Hospitals Trust (NUH) has temporarily suspended the sacking
of staff, bed closures and ward closures but it has made not a jot of improvement to morale. We make no apologies for using the term ‘sacking’ either because no matter what euphemism it is dressed up in, be it ‘redundancy’, ‘early retirement’ or ‘reconfiguration’ if someone is forced out of a job against their will then they have been sacked. Bullying and belligerent management is the order of the day. Their idea of consultation with staff is to tell us what they have decided and if anyone doesn’t like it they know what they can do. Highly experienced teams, nurses included, are being broken up and put elsewhere to cover for criminal shortages of staff. Shift times have been changed, with the usual ‘consultation’, simply to save the trust money as it cuts down unsocial hour’s payments to staff. Never mind that many workers rely on every penny they get because their pay is so abysmally low in the first place. Some nurses have arbitrarily had the number of their monthly night shifts nearly doubled, again to cover for deliberately low staffing levels. This might, to some, not seem much to bear but these shifts are 12 hours long and, contrary to the story management always puts out, it is not quieter and less busy on nights.
LET’S TAKE OUR
OWN MEDICINE
It is quite common to go all night without a rest, sit down or proper break period. We lecture patients about drinking plenty to keep properly hydrated but go home at the end of most shifts, day and night, with a thumping dehydration headache. We are expected to find beds for patients when no free beds exist so the first thing that happens is looking at who can be discharged. Never mind that minutes before there was no talk of this or that person going home, because they are not ready for discharge, but all of a sudden they are when a bed is needed. Either that or patients will be packed up and shifted, anytime of day or night, to another area to make way for incoming ones.
Domestic services are suffering from a chronic shortage of staff. There used to be 2 per ward but now with privatisation and all the negative baggage that brings most are down to 1. Even then that domestic will often have to cover another ward to make up for shortages and, while this is not the sole reason for the increase in MRSA and other infection rates, it obviously does not help.
BUILDING A CAMPAIGN
From the above you would be forgiven for thinking that it is all doom and gloom in the health service, well it is. If you work in it you will likely be only too familiar with it all and could probably add many more facts of your own; well please do. We welcome any contributions from health workers that help expose the appalling state of affairs they have to work under and that patients and relatives have to suffer under. Anonymity guaranteed, just send contributions to the email address.
This brings us to another bone of contention among health workers. We are constantly bombarded with poll after poll saying how highly satisfied the public are with the care they receive when in hospital and of course the respondents to these polls are being sincere and truthful. However, we also know that there is a big reluctance to say otherwise where it applies in case it is construed as a criticism of nursing and medical staff. There are many occasions where a patient or relative not only has the right to complain to management about aspects of care that are a fault of the crazy way hospitals are run now but are encouraged to by hospital staff in the hope of bringing about improvements. But they won’t because, and the reason they give: it will reflect badly on the staff. NO IT WILL NOT.
LET THEM KNOW WHAT’S
GOING ON
If patients or carers have a grievance they must air it to management because if enough of them do they might, and only might, listen to them because they sure as hell do not listen to staff. We think a more accurate view of standards of patient care would be obtained by asking those who have to deliver it, the workers. They are the ones rushing from patient to patient trying to get everything done but having no time for anything other than production line care. They are the ones who go home at the end of the shift feeling guilty because they know that patients deserve much better. They are the ones who often blame themselves for this poor quality care. They are the ones who constantly worry that today might be the day they make a catastrophic error that results in a deterioration, or worse, in someone’s condition.
WHAT CAN WE DO?
So what can we do? One suggestion has been a work-to-rule in which we insist on full breaks and make sure we take them. In addition go home on time, no staying behind to help out ‘just for a minute’. If we all did this every shift not only would we feel a lot better physically and mentally but eventually the guilt of doing so would quickly disappear. Another suggestion is to start up a series of lunch-time walkouts. The Medical Secretaries did so twice in September and demonstrated on Derby Road outside the main entrance. The public must be kept informed and involved in what is happening and this would be one way of doing it.
NEW YEAR RESOLUTION
Let’s make a New Year resolution. From Monday 5th February demonstrate on Derby Road every Monday and Friday from 12.00. for as long as you can manage. Arrange your break-time to coincide with this. If we all do only 30 minutes but they overlap the demonstration could be visible for quite some time. Put pressure on your union to support this action by publicly voicing its support and by encouraging members to attend. Get placards from your union or make your own.
Remember, management only get away with intimidating us because we let them. No one can empower us, we can only empower ourselves. Let’s do it!
p.s. Ya Basta is Spanish for ‘enough is enough’.
YA BASTA!
Nottingham University Hospitals Trust (NUH) has temporarily suspended the sacking
of staff, bed closures and ward closures but it has made not a jot of improvement to morale. We make no apologies for using the term ‘sacking’ either because no matter what euphemism it is dressed up in, be it ‘redundancy’, ‘early retirement’ or ‘reconfiguration’ if someone is forced out of a job against their will then they have been sacked. Bullying and belligerent management is the order of the day. Their idea of consultation with staff is to tell us what they have decided and if anyone doesn’t like it they know what they can do. Highly experienced teams, nurses included, are being broken up and put elsewhere to cover for criminal shortages of staff. Shift times have been changed, with the usual ‘consultation’, simply to save the trust money as it cuts down unsocial hour’s payments to staff. Never mind that many workers rely on every penny they get because their pay is so abysmally low in the first place. Some nurses have arbitrarily had the number of their monthly night shifts nearly doubled, again to cover for deliberately low staffing levels. This might, to some, not seem much to bear but these shifts are 12 hours long and, contrary to the story management always puts out, it is not quieter and less busy on nights.
LET’S TAKE OUR
OWN MEDICINE
It is quite common to go all night without a rest, sit down or proper break period. We lecture patients about drinking plenty to keep properly hydrated but go home at the end of most shifts, day and night, with a thumping dehydration headache. We are expected to find beds for patients when no free beds exist so the first thing that happens is looking at who can be discharged. Never mind that minutes before there was no talk of this or that person going home, because they are not ready for discharge, but all of a sudden they are when a bed is needed. Either that or patients will be packed up and shifted, anytime of day or night, to another area to make way for incoming ones.
Domestic services are suffering from a chronic shortage of staff. There used to be 2 per ward but now with privatisation and all the negative baggage that brings most are down to 1. Even then that domestic will often have to cover another ward to make up for shortages and, while this is not the sole reason for the increase in MRSA and other infection rates, it obviously does not help.
BUILDING A CAMPAIGN
From the above you would be forgiven for thinking that it is all doom and gloom in the health service, well it is. If you work in it you will likely be only too familiar with it all and could probably add many more facts of your own; well please do. We welcome any contributions from health workers that help expose the appalling state of affairs they have to work under and that patients and relatives have to suffer under. Anonymity guaranteed, just send contributions to the email address.
This brings us to another bone of contention among health workers. We are constantly bombarded with poll after poll saying how highly satisfied the public are with the care they receive when in hospital and of course the respondents to these polls are being sincere and truthful. However, we also know that there is a big reluctance to say otherwise where it applies in case it is construed as a criticism of nursing and medical staff. There are many occasions where a patient or relative not only has the right to complain to management about aspects of care that are a fault of the crazy way hospitals are run now but are encouraged to by hospital staff in the hope of bringing about improvements. But they won’t because, and the reason they give: it will reflect badly on the staff. NO IT WILL NOT.
LET THEM KNOW WHAT’S
GOING ON
If patients or carers have a grievance they must air it to management because if enough of them do they might, and only might, listen to them because they sure as hell do not listen to staff. We think a more accurate view of standards of patient care would be obtained by asking those who have to deliver it, the workers. They are the ones rushing from patient to patient trying to get everything done but having no time for anything other than production line care. They are the ones who go home at the end of the shift feeling guilty because they know that patients deserve much better. They are the ones who often blame themselves for this poor quality care. They are the ones who constantly worry that today might be the day they make a catastrophic error that results in a deterioration, or worse, in someone’s condition.
WHAT CAN WE DO?
So what can we do? One suggestion has been a work-to-rule in which we insist on full breaks and make sure we take them. In addition go home on time, no staying behind to help out ‘just for a minute’. If we all did this every shift not only would we feel a lot better physically and mentally but eventually the guilt of doing so would quickly disappear. Another suggestion is to start up a series of lunch-time walkouts. The Medical Secretaries did so twice in September and demonstrated on Derby Road outside the main entrance. The public must be kept informed and involved in what is happening and this would be one way of doing it.
NEW YEAR RESOLUTION
Let’s make a New Year resolution. From Monday 5th February demonstrate on Derby Road every Monday and Friday from 12.00. for as long as you can manage. Arrange your break-time to coincide with this. If we all do only 30 minutes but they overlap the demonstration could be visible for quite some time. Put pressure on your union to support this action by publicly voicing its support and by encouraging members to attend. Get placards from your union or make your own.
Remember, management only get away with intimidating us because we let them. No one can empower us, we can only empower ourselves. Let’s do it!
p.s. Ya Basta is Spanish for ‘enough is enough’.
TomU
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