Sunday People

‘I wouldn’t want my family cared for in this hospital’ - SHOCK NURSES POLL

- Nicola Small

NURSES have revealed the scale of staff shortages, with 8 in 10 saying there were not enough to provide adequate care on their last shift.

One A&E senior nurse told a Royal College of Nursing survey of almost 20,00 nurses: “I wouldn’t want my family cared for here.”

The shock findings come 11 days before the nurses’ first walkout.

Another community nurse told how patients were becoming critically unwell as overstretc­hed nurses were missing signs of deteriorat­ing health.

Last night RCN general secretary Pat Cullen said: “Stories like these are all too familiar to our members grappling with record nurse vacancies, being underpaid and [facing] year-round pressures.

“Ministers have failed to heed our warnings, spending billions on agency staff to plug workforce gaps when what’s needed is serious investment in nursing, including fair pay.

“Politician­s have the power to stop strike action, but must act fast or 100,000 nurses will walk out.”

Compromise­d

NHS data out this week shows nursing vacancies jumped 19% in a year to a record of almost 48,000 on September 30. The RCN found only a quarter of shifts had the planned number of registered nurses.

Only 18% of nurses said they had time to provide the care they’d like to. And 62% said patient care was compromise­d on their last shift.

A nursing sister in a Welsh A&E said: “Missed meds for patients in ambulances, deteriorat­ion of a patient that went unnoticed, insufficie­nt skin care and toileting. I wouldn’t want my family here.”

Strikes at dozens of hospitals are planned on December 15 and 20.

The union wants a pay rise of 5% above inflation. But Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said: “Union demands are not affordable.

“We’ve accepted recommenda­tions to give over one million NHS workers a rise of at least £1,400. The NHS has plans to minimise disruption.”

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