My daughter-in-law was a nurse until last fall when she had to make the decision between the jab or her job. She'd been getting increasingly disillusioned with the medical system. Several years ago her hospital fired the floor secretaries, saying that the nurses could answer the phone and do all the paperwork. Fast forward a couple of mo…
My daughter-in-law was a nurse until last fall when she had to make the decision between the jab or her job. She'd been getting increasingly disillusioned with the medical system. Several years ago her hospital fired the floor secretaries, saying that the nurses could answer the phone and do all the paperwork. Fast forward a couple of more years and the hospital fired all of the LPNs, saying that minimum wage "techs" could do the LPNs job. Wasn't uncommon after this for my daughter-in-law to come home upset because her tech would only work with a certain number of patients then sit the rest of shift at the nurses station. Eventually her 12 hour shift became 14 or 15 because she didn't have time to chart until after her shift was over. She was a compassionate nurse who cared but was burned out.
I think the medical system has many issues like too many regulations, insurance companies controlling treatment, burned out staff, and too much pharmaceutical company influence. Those who work in the system could list many more.
My daughter-in-law was a nurse until last fall when she had to make the decision between the jab or her job. She'd been getting increasingly disillusioned with the medical system. Several years ago her hospital fired the floor secretaries, saying that the nurses could answer the phone and do all the paperwork. Fast forward a couple of more years and the hospital fired all of the LPNs, saying that minimum wage "techs" could do the LPNs job. Wasn't uncommon after this for my daughter-in-law to come home upset because her tech would only work with a certain number of patients then sit the rest of shift at the nurses station. Eventually her 12 hour shift became 14 or 15 because she didn't have time to chart until after her shift was over. She was a compassionate nurse who cared but was burned out.
I think the medical system has many issues like too many regulations, insurance companies controlling treatment, burned out staff, and too much pharmaceutical company influence. Those who work in the system could list many more.