Tauranga NZNO members to strike today

New Zealand's nurses - seen here at an earlier strike - say patient safety is at risk. Photo: Marika Khabazi

Hutt Valley/Rotorua/Tauranga NZNO members employed by Te Whatu Ora will today strike for four hours over patient safety concerns following recent collective bargaining with Health NZ.

New Zealand Nurses Organisation Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa members fear Te Whatu Ora’s plans to pause a key component of its safe staffing programme put patient and whānau safety and wellbeing at risk.

NZNO Lakes delegate and spokesperson Lyn Logan is striking because she says Te Whatu Ora’s "constant financial constraints impact the care she and her colleagues provide their patients".

“For me, it’s about informing the public who use health services and my community, that if I do not strike then I am not committed to improving health services in my region.

“I want to give our community the best care I can when they come into the hospital. At present I cannot do this,” Lyn Logan said.

Tauranga delegate Helena Joyce says she is striking because as a nurse she’s witnessed how dangerous understaffing can be.

“Nurses get overworked and then can make mistakes.

“Years of effort have gone into CCDM FTE calculations and now they are putting it on hold. There seems to be no point to this except to normalise understaffing,” Helena Joyce said.

Health NZ prepared for rolling strikes

Health New Zealand | Te Whatu Ora can reassure the public that plans and mitigations are in place to manage the rolling strikes by New Zealand Nurses Organisation members across the country on different days from December 10-19, 1-5pm.

Strike action is being planned for the Bay of Plenty and Lakes regions for December 13.

“As with previous strike activity our hospitals and emergency departments will remain open, and health professionals will still be available to ensure the continued availability of health services for those who need them,” said northern regional deputy chief executive Mark Sheperd.

Due to the strike activity some clinics may be closed to maintain patient safety.

Anyone with a hospital appointment on the day of the strike in their region should attend unless contacted directly by the service. Any appointments that are deferred will be rescheduled for the next available opportunity.

“We are concerned about recent incorrect claims by the NZNO on staffing levels and the use of the Care Capacity Demand Management programme,” said Sheperd.

“I can reassure the public that Health NZ is committed to safe staffing, and we are not pausing the CCDM programme.

“We are undertaking a rapid improvement programme to assure the accuracy and quality of data, and the methodology used for CCDM FTE calculations.”

FTE calculations will resume in the new year and be aligned to ongoing budget and planning cycles.

“We greatly value the significant contribution of our nursing workforce in helping to care for the health of New Zealanders and their communities and we are committed to reaching a settlement with NZNO.

“Any settlement needs to reflect the ongoing reset of Health NZ as we work to get back to budget and complete the restructuring underway.”

Since 2011 nurse salaries have outperformed the broader labour market outcomes, as shown through comparison against the Labour Cost Index.

For registered nurses, the top salary step has risen by 45% since 2011 with an additional 25% from the recent pay equity settlement on top of that.

“We believe bargaining is the most effective way to resolve the outstanding issues and avoid any further disruption to patients and the wider health system.”

 

3 comments

And Now

Posted on 13-12-2024 11:49 | By Merlin

And now I read about another 100 staff to be laid off.This Government is all about cutting the costs and not about the services and staff necessary. No wonder staff are going to Australia. Less rhetoric and more staff not less staff. Especially on the front line.


Facts please.....

Posted on 13-12-2024 20:39 | By groutby

........dramatising the situation Merlin is not helpful....a small amount of genuine research will show you a few things....the '100 staff to be laid off' you refer to... this will affect staff from planning, procurement, fundings and outcomes, whatever they are, and certainly not the 'front line'...there are no planned front line staff reductions...and as for 'going to Australia' they have their own problems also having imported many instant skilled staff... that was always happening anyway as the 'big OE' beckons and also for some who are simply 'over' the expensive mess the previous government left us with....however, if you have some facts to support your comment, please post detail....


Improve on the past

Posted on 14-12-2024 21:02 | By Blessed

Instead of undoing everything previous governments have done, why not just improve? Staff weren't happy before this government and they aren't happy with this one either. You want a sector to succeed, you need to give them the tools and the money to do so. Along with staffing issues, alot of our hospital need maintenance too. Nurses working beyond their usual "safe" hours, A&E over run, communication between hospital and department slack which means important information gets missed.... so worried about our public sector collapsing.


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