Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Nurses calling it quits as peak hits

- PAUL WESTON

NURSES say they are resigning because they do not have enough protective equipment against infection in the most dangerous wards for patients during the peak of the Omicron wave.

Gold Coast Health has responded by saying morale among staffers is not dropping and none of the recent resignatio­ns, in their mental health unit, was due to Covid.

But Currumbin MP Laura Gerber, responding to concerns raised with her office, has provided the Bulletin with informatio­n showing real fears about nursing at the University Hospital mental health units where patients can move around freely unlike others restricted to beds.

Health sources say staffers, after being notified of their first Covid positive patient, within two days had run out of masks, goggles and gowns.

“They no longer had ample supply of Iso alcohol to clean work spaces – or enough hand sanitiser for staff. The lack of preparatio­n and foresight for this is astonishin­g,” the source said.

Gold Coast Health maintains that across the service “there are adequate supplies of all PPE items” and staffers had been fit-tested for two masks.

A meeting was held, the staffer said, and discussion­s focused on building walls in the ward to give the staff “clean” spaces to be able to work.

But it was decided that one of the two mental health wards would be a Covid positive ward.

“The morale between staff had plummeted with three staff resigning,” the source said.

“They could not believe they have allowed them to work under these conditions. They are already five staff members short for a shift which is dangerous for both staff and patients.”

“They (management) are all well aware that it is a pandemic and that there were going to be trying times ahead but not once did they think that not even a couple of days after receiving their first Covid positive patient would the whole thing crumble.

“The mental health ward is a ward like no other ward in the hospital. The patients are mobile, often not compliant with having to wear masks and the nursing staff have constant interactio­ns with them.”

A Coast health spokesman said: “It is untrue that staff morale has plummeted. We recognise that all of our staff are working under challengin­g conditions and applaud their dedication and commitment to serving the Gold Coast community. There have not been any resignatio­ns from staff in the Mental Health Unit associated with the latest stage of the Covid-19 response.

“Our Covid-19 response was developed nearly two years ago. The plan, readily available to all staff on our intranet, indicated that the Pandanus Unit would be used to accommodat­e mental health consumers with Covid-19, when necessary. This month saw our long-term plan actioned, after extensive preparatio­n and staff consultati­on.

“We thank our staff for demonstrat­ing a flexible and agile approach to the current changes faced across the health service. We applaud their profession­alism as they deliver safe and compassion­ate care.”

But Ms Gerber said staffers and patients deserved better planning from the government.

“The state government has had two years to prepare … it is disgracefu­l that the hardworkin­g nurses in the mental health unit have been left so exposed and unsupporte­d. Our hardworkin­g doctors, nurses and healthcare profession­als don’t deserve to be treated like this.”

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