Otago Daily Times

500 nurse vacancies in agedcare facilities

-

WELLINGTON: The New Zealand Aged Care Associatio­n is calling on the Government to urgently address a staffing shortage ‘‘crisis’’ after a record number of empty jobs nationwide.

NZACA chief executive Simon Wallace said every day members were ringing and emailing him about more nurses lost to district health boards because of the pay gap.

‘‘We’d already hit a record 10% vacancies in August with 500 out of nearly 5000 registered nursing positions empty. That has accelerate­d and is simply not sustainabl­e.’’

Mr Wallace said what had been a trickle of nurses leaving in anticipati­on of the better conditions being negotiated under the DHB MultiEmplo­yer Collective Agreement for registered nurses, had turned into a torrent since the settlement in August.

The NZACA was discussing with the DHBs and Ministry of Health a solution but Mr Wallace said it was a crisis that needed addressing now.

‘‘They have responded to the teacher shortages in our schools by committing to recruit up to 900 teachers from overseas.

‘‘Why aren’t we seeing Government respond in the same way and bring in hundreds of registered nurses from overseas to ease the desperate shortages in our aged residentia­l care facilities?’’

Mr Wallace said annual turnover of nurses had risen from 26% in February last year to nearly 38% as of August this year and was likely to have worsened since then.

‘‘There is no relief. Nurses are critical to delivering safe and quality care for our older citizens in residentia­l care.

‘‘Ultimately, it is our older people in aged residentia­l care who will be impacted. The potential closure of specialist units as well as whole facilities will put pressure on the DHBs. Where else will these residents go?’’

NZACA was also lobbying Government and Immigratio­n NZ to return registered age care nurses to the LongTerm Shortage Skills List after they were cut off the list in 2016. — NZME

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand