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INMO Warns Of Industrial Action Over Trolley Crisis: "In Some Hospitals Fire Safety Reports Are Not Being Adhered To"

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The INMO has said nurses are at the end of their tether.

The Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation has said that it has no choice but to consult with its members resulting from persistent hospital overcrowding which is not being taken seriously as a workers’ health issue by the HSE.

This comes as 457 patients are without a bed in Irish hospitals today, including 7 in Naas General Hospital.

Naas resident and INMO General Secretary Phil Ní Sheaghdha commented: “The INMO is of the view that the Emergency Department agreement brokered between this union and the HSE is being ignored by the employer, leaving nurses exposed to unsafe and high-risk situations.

"We have referred this issue back to the Workplace Relations Commission and a date is awaited.

"At this juncture without real focus and input we will have no other option but to discuss industrial action with our members in emergency departments," she insisted.

“The INMO has requested that the Emergency Department Taskforce meet as a matter of urgency three times and the response from the HSE has been inadequate.

"For there to be 457 patients without a bed on a single day in the middle of June is not something we should accept as a given.

“The response thus far from the Health Services Executive, the Health and Safety Authority has been extremely lacking.

"The fact that this important body has not convened in a time period where we have seen over 3566 patients on trolleys and a 76% increase in COVID hospitalisations since the 4th of June is completely inexcusable.

“The Health and Safety Authority must act on the unsafe conditions are members are working in and patients are presenting to. We know that in some hospitals such as University Hospital Limerick that fire safety reports are not being adhered to.

"The dignity of patients is often diminished because of the conditions they are being treated in. Emergency Departments are pressure cooker environments leading to the physical and verbal assault of our members in some instances.

"The HSE has a duty to provide a safe environment for employees and patients and this just is not being adhered to in the vast majority of hospitals.

“Our nurses are at the end of our tether, and they cannot provide the clinical care that is required.

"They are burnt out both physically and mentally and cannot continue at this pace. The slow reaction and at times hands-off approach from their employer will drive many nurses out of the profession," she added.

 

 

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