Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Nurse morale hits ‘low’

- TALISA ELEY

STAFF at the Gold Coast’s two public hospitals are ignoring directives to shut up or face the sack, saying management have ignored their pleas for too long.

A number of nurses have contacted the Bulletin after Thursday’s front page story revealed patients in the shortstay units at both Gold Coast Univeristy and Robina hospitals were being given sandwiches instead of hot meals.

The nurses were reaching into their own pocket to buy food for hungry patients.

After the story was published, staff were threatened with the sack if they spoke out.

A senior nurse, speaking on condition of anonymity, said staff had been complainin­g “since at least last July” about culture and patient welfare, but complaints blocked by middle management.

“There’s gossiping, there’s bullying, there’s intimidati­on and you take it to the next level and it gets shut down,” the nurse said. “You take it to the level above that and nothing happens.

“The boss would have a heart attack if they knew what was going on with middle management.”

The nurse said staff morale was at an “all-time low”.

“I’m seeing good people leaving the hospital, taking early retirement, resigning, going out private because they’re just disgusted and they’ve lost all faith in the system because of this.”

Another nurse claimed the hospitals were employing unnecessar­y managers at the expense of resources in wards.

The nurse also claimed an extra after-hours nurse-management role had been added at the middle of last year to straddle both hospitals, but the position was “not needed”.

“Other nurse managers raised concerns at the time because there was not a requiremen­t for this position and other people had their hours cut to foot the bill,” the nurse said. “There was no money for it or necessity for it.”

In a letter sent to staff yesterday, Gold Coast Health Service chief executive Ron Calvert said he would have addressed the meal problem in the short-stay wards much sooner if he had known.

“The events reported in the Gold Coast Bulletin … suggest to me that some members of our staff have felt their concerns have not been heard by their managers. The culture I want here is one where our staff concerns are heard, and I’m sorry staff have not felt heard on this matter.

“If you don’t feel your concerns about patient safety have been adequately addressed then by all means please escalate above your manager.” THE family of a Robina Hospital patient has written to the Health Minister demanding an explanatio­n to why they have to pay for free-toair television. Patients are slugged $10 a day to access channels from their hospital bed, along with an extra $5 to hire headphones. Hugh Taudien has been at his partner’s bedside for the past month after she suffered a stroke and said it was “unfair” to pay for something that was available for free at home. “Some of these people are in their last stage of life and they deserve to have these little creature comforts,” he said. Gold Coast Health said TVs were free at the University Hospital, while paid for at Robina through an external company, “which is in line with industry practice”. Gold Coast Health said it did not benefit financiall­y from the arrangemen­t.

 ??  ?? Arundel local Chadwick Jones has a huge appetite for success in competitiv­e eating.
Arundel local Chadwick Jones has a huge appetite for success in competitiv­e eating.

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