Joyce’s statement that “Under-staffing or short-staffing is an intentional practice in which hospital management does not schedule an appropriate number of registered nurses, with the appropriate clinical experience, to safely care for patients in a hospital unit, driven by a desire to increase hospital profits. These profits come at the expense of both patient care as well as worker health and safety, says NNU.” Makes great sense, of course.
There are enough nurses. Even if there are not, there are many nurses in other countries (and I am not urging recruitment) who seek to work in the US and have. I once worked in an organization in Argentina that helped in providing nurses from other countries for the US. Why? Many times hospitals in the US sought these nurses because they could not only provide service but help keep nurses’ salaries under control in the US.
It should not be this way, although I believe people should be free to move freely across borders if that is what they seek.
Joyce’s statement that “Under-staffing or short-staffing is an intentional practice in which hospital management does not schedule an appropriate number of registered nurses, with the appropriate clinical experience, to safely care for patients in a hospital unit, driven by a desire to increase hospital profits. These profits come at the expense of both patient care as well as worker health and safety, says NNU.” Makes great sense, of course.
There are enough nurses. Even if there are not, there are many nurses in other countries (and I am not urging recruitment) who seek to work in the US and have. I once worked in an organization in Argentina that helped in providing nurses from other countries for the US. Why? Many times hospitals in the US sought these nurses because they could not only provide service but help keep nurses’ salaries under control in the US.
It should not be this way, although I believe people should be free to move freely across borders if that is what they seek.