Hospital Greed Is Destroying Our Nurses Heres Why Nyt Opinion

Opinion A Nurse S Perspective The New York Times In the opinion video above, nurses set the record straight about the root cause of the nursing crisis: chronic understaffing by profit driven hospitals that predates the pandemic. The biggest force that’s driving nurses away: greedy hospitals. “i could no longer work in critical care under the conditions i was being forced to work under with poor staffing, and that’s.

Opinion Why Covid 19 Didn T Create The Nursing Crisis The New York We know the real cause of the crisis in our hospitals. it’s greed. nurses would like to set the record straight on the hospital staffing crisis. video by lucy king and jonah m. kessel. Hospital greed is destroying our nurses. “we’re entering our third year of covid, and america’s nurses, who we celebrated as heroes during the early days of lockdown, are now leaving the bedside. Hospitals prioritize financial gains over patient safety and nurse well being, leading to a decline in the quality of care and an exodus of qualified nurses. [04:05]. Doctors and nurses are labor to exploit and will be ground under the heel of hospital administration in search of profit and not patient outcomes. capitalism is not the answer to every problem, and it is literally killing us.

Opinion Nurses Deserve Better So Do Their Patients The New York Times Hospitals prioritize financial gains over patient safety and nurse well being, leading to a decline in the quality of care and an exodus of qualified nurses. [04:05]. Doctors and nurses are labor to exploit and will be ground under the heel of hospital administration in search of profit and not patient outcomes. capitalism is not the answer to every problem, and it is literally killing us. This is a powerful new york times video that gives voice to the real reasons why so many nurses are facing burnout and deciding to leave the profession in droves👇💔 we have had the. In september 2020, around 800 nurses (represented by the illinois nurses association (ina)) and 3,700 hospital staff (represented by service employers international union (seiu), local 73) in the university of illinois healthcare system went on strike during a breakdown in contract negotiations. In a major victory for the nurses’ union, mount sinai and montefiore, two of the biggest medical centers in new york, agreed last week to do just that, ending the strike in three days. Why aren’t you bringing attention to perfectly healthy nurses being fired due to mandates? and actively sick with covid nurses being forced to work? greed is part of the problem, but it’s certainly not going to get any better with the current situation ….
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