dark light

Pilots offer stress talks to nurses.

Have just read this on the Mail online –

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=373138&in_page_id=1770

Interesting idea, but extremely valid knowing how important team work is!

Member for:

19 years 1 month

Posts:

8,395

Send private message

By: kev35 - 5th January 2006 at 10:05

Stress is very high in medical and nursing situations. However, the article spectacularly fails to consider how much of the stress is directly related to the running of the hospitals. Staffing levels, budget constraints, equipment shortages (anything from ventilators to sticky tape) junior Doctors who are often at best careless and at worst downright dangerous. Has any of this been taken into consideration?

Teamwork? It is difficult to encourage teamwork when so many staff are bank or agency who work just the one shift on your ward and you never see them again. Nursing in particular is all about the continuity of care. With the NHS situation as it is currently, this is rarely possible. Handover reports were mandatory, but I have in the past worked on wards where no report was given so as an agency nurse, I had no idea what was wrong with the patients I was entrusted to care for.

Personally, unless the money is provided to secure the infrastructure and to provide adequate staffing levels, I don’t see how these talks will help. However, if proper staffing levels were adhered to and the buget was aavailable to adequately provision wards, then these talks may well have a beneficial effect.

Regards,

kev35

Member for:

19 years 1 month

Posts:

1,048

Send private message

By: wessex boy - 5th January 2006 at 08:48

I am a bit worried about the 980k near-misses in Hospitals

Does this refer to low-flying Air Ambulances?

Or is it a reference to the femininity of the Nurses in question?

Member for:

19 years 1 month

Posts:

3,399

Send private message

By: Canpark - 4th January 2006 at 13:12

Interesting…

Sign in to post a reply