Nurses to Rally for Health Crisis fix on Saturday

Maranga Mai! Rise Up!
Thousands of nurses, midwives, health care assistants and kaimahi hauora, alongside their whānau and communities, will Maranga Mai! Rise Up! to rally on Saturday in 20 locations around the country. They will call on political parties to have policies to address the nursing and health crisis this election year.
The rallies, organised by the New Zealand Nurses Organisation Tōpūtanga Tapuhi Kaitiaki o Aotearoa (NZNO), will see these essential workers, their friends and their families taking action by joining together to march, hear speeches, wave banners and enjoy family-focused activities, between 11 am and 1 pm in most places.
This is the first time all 57,000 NZNO members are being called to rise up for united action, regardless of the area of nursing they work in (hospitals, aged care, Māori and Iwi, Primary Health Care, Plunket, Hospice etc.) because NZNO said, the issues boil down to the same things for every nurse, everywhere: unsafe staffing levels and a fundamental undervaluing of the work they do.
The rallies aim for health workers and communities to call on politicians and their parties to have policies this election year to address the nursing crisis and for health to top their list of election priorities.
"So much has been asked of nurses, and they have delivered like the courageous and professional workforce they are, right across the Health Sector," said NZNO Chief Executive Paul Goulter.
"But decades of poor planning, inadequate funding, and outright neglect across successive governments have led us to a time of absolute crisis regarding pay, staffing resources and morale across the nursing sector."
He said almost any nurse you speak to will say patients are not receiving adequate care.
"That’s worrying for our elderly and infirm, but it’s also soul-destroying for nurses. Add to that poor conditions, chronic overwork and the Government’s refusal to settle outstanding pay issues, and it’s no wonder thousands have left for Australia, and thousands more are making plans to leave."
Paul Goulter said the nursing crisis could be fixed but that the Government needs to stop pussy-footing around.
"We need 4000-5000 more nurses; it’s as simple as that. So we want to see everything possible being done without delay.
"We need better pay and conditions now, so nurses are valued and stop leaving; free training and other incentives for nursing students - a third of whom drop out because we make it too hard to qualify; more Māori and Pasifika nurses; and a health system that upholds te Tiriti so people get culturally appropriate care and inequities are reduced."
NZNO will also be launching a petition at the rallies calling on political parties to commit to fixing the nursing crisis. Paul Goulter said it is intended that the petition response will be massive.
"This is a chance for the public in Aotearoa, New Zealand to express their concerns for the well-being of our nurses and their concerns about the future of our health system.
"The crisis is worsening by the day, but it can be fixed with commitment and courage, and we want the public’s help in sending that message to those wanting our votes in 2023."
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