Sunday Sport

Day on wards giving bed baths… then sex with 7 MEN at night

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A NURSE who turned to kinky hookering to make ends meet last night told of her horror when a former patient turned up at the massage parlour where she worked – and demanded BUM SEX!

The specialist orthopaedi­c nurse, who we have agreed to identify only as Becky, had been working at the parlour for only six weeks when she recognised the patient.

She said: “He was in the room waiting and I walked in with my basque, panties and my suspenders.

“The light was quite low but he clocked me straight away.

“He said ‘ Hello!’ in a way that said he knew me.

“I recognised him eventually. He’d been on the ward for about three weeks so I got to know him quite well. “I’d even given him bed baths!” Becky said the patient- turnedpunt­er was initially reluctant to reveal what he wanted.

The pretty 29- year- old said: “It was the first time a patient had come in and it felt a bit weird, but in the end sex was just like a medical procedure.

“I said, ‘ What would you like me to do, darling?’ and he kind of whispered that he wanted to f** k me in the arse. WARD A STORY: How we broke shock news who was a regular at the parlour.

“They’ve always been more embarrasse­d than me.”

Becky, of Bristol, said she turned to prostituti­on when her landlord put her rent up.

She said: ‘ I’d been struggling already and the rent rise was the last straw.

“I knew I needed some more money and I thought, ‘ Why not?’ I MAKING ENDS MEET: Becky could now give up on nursing

Becky told her story after the English Collective of Prostitute­s ( ECP) said that an increasing numbers of public sector workers are turning to sex work due to a squeeze on living standards.

The report found sex workers earn significan­tly more per hour than women working in the other jobs – including those in public sector positions such as nurses and midwives.

It follows a 2015 report by Leeds University and funded by the Wellcome Trust which found more than 70 per cent of UK sex workers had previously worked in healthcare, education or for charities. Becky’s case proves that many still do.

Christina McAnea, of Unison, said: “It is a sad reflection of the low pay endemic to so much of the public sector, particular­ly social care.

“If services were better funded, and the jobs and skills that are traditiona­lly seen as ‘ women’s work’ more highly valued, people would not need to supplement their income.”

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