MONIQUE FORD/STUFF
Ryan Teahan, a clinical nurse co-ordinator at Wellington Regional Hospital s post-anaesthetic care unit, was among the 30,000 nurses striking over pay and conditions on Wednesday. (First published June, 2021) Part of this included staffing hospitals according to the care capacity demand programme, software which helps hospitals better set safe staffing levels, and variable response management which ensures there are enough clinicians on shift should workload pressures increase. All 20 boards were supposed to have started using the programme by June 30, but only 10 have. It also included the pay equity claim which aimed to address sex-based pay discrimination, while the pay offer would lift base pay-rates by $1800 a year and a lump sum payment of $1200. Members were generally happy with the pay-aspect of the rejected deal, but were unconvinced it addressed safe staffing issues.
Watch live: Health Minister Andrew Little responds after nurses reject pay offer
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We Boomers have adopted a pretty hypocritical stance on cannabis
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National bowel cancer screening saving lives 29 Jul 2021 12:24 PM
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Health Minister Andrew Little says the national bowel screening programme has already detected more than 1000 New Zealanders with bowel cancer.
The programme started in 2017 and is now in 17 of the 20 district health board areas.
Mr Little says New Zealand has one of the highest rates of bowel cancer in the developed world, and it’s this country’s second-most-common cause of death from cancer, with 100 deaths a month.
The programme is starting to reduce that toll.
Thirty-nine per cent of the cancers found have been in the early stages, where there is a 95 per cent chance of patients living at least another five years.