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Originally Posted by Toy Soldier
There is plentiful, significant, peer reviewed academic evidence that proves that a higher number of degree-educated nurses results in better health outcomes, including reduced mortality rates, across all areas of medicine. The research has been done, the numbers have been crunched... You not thinking its necessary really means absolutely nothing Cherie  .
And when I talk about conditions I'm not talking about sick pay and holiday allowance - those are always decent in public sector employment.
I'm talking about how front line staff are viewed by management (and politicians), the toxic culture of professional bullying and mistreatment, the threats made against potential whistleblowers, the general disregard for the professional qualifications of the workforce...
But it seems like we can't even make it through one TiBB thread DURING the pandemic without flat denials that there's mistreatment of the workforce, so to answer the question of, "do we expect that things will be better post-Covid?"....... Lol, no. Everyone will go right back to ignoring the elephant.
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I don’t have first hand experience of this as I don’t work in the NHS, all those things happen in many big organisations including Westminster as far as we hear, not sure why your wife went into nursing so recently, its a mystery given all your comments above
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'put a bit of lippy on and run a brush through your hair, we are alcoholics, not savages'
Quote:
Originally Posted by Beso
Livelier than Izaaz, and hes got 2 feet.
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