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It’s time to shout out for health

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I’ve spent a long time working in health, and have seen a lot of change. Governments come and they go, budgets change, policies shift. But what doesn’t change is the reason we are attracted to health careers- it comes from a deeply felt desire to make a difference, and change the lives of others for the better.

What you’ve been telling us over the last few years is that it’s becoming harder to connect to that feeling in your everyday working life.

Of course, we still do good. Nursing, like all people-centred jobs is about getting creative, working with what you’ve got and accepting what you can’t change. But the more workarounds our members have to do to give good care, the less time they actually have to provide that care. Nursing SHOULD be a job where you can go home at the end of the day with a satisfied feeling that you were able to make the difference, not frustrated about what you couldn’t do. Nursing is a job we should be able to love.

You have told us you want:

  • “A health system we can be proud of, where everyone can get the healthcare they need when and where they need it.”
  • “To feel proud of the care we provide, and be confident that we have the resources to provide safe, quality care at all times.”
  • “We want satisfying careers with pay that values our work and is enough to thrive on, and ongoing professional development.”

And that’s what NZNO is also pushing for. But we need your help!

Right now, the effects of healthcare funding are all around us- on the ward, in the community, and in the news. In just the last few weeks, we’ve seen news reports about

And the list could go on. The best management and policy in the world can’t make 1+1 = 3. Healthcare underfunding affects almost every aspect of our working lives, and is starting to impact on patient care. I know we all want better. That’s why we are running a campaign programme led by YOU, our members, called Shout out for health. Shout out for health will take action on health funding to push for a health system we are all proud of. Sometimes it will be about a particular service, like our petition on funding for Smokefree services.

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And sometimes it will be about a local issue, that you let us know is happening. The important thing is we need confident, passionate members to make it a success.

If you are an NZNO delegate or NZNO champion, you should have received an email inviting you to a special Shout out leadership training programme. You need to let us know now if you are in- so check your emails please!

If you are ready to stand up and take action to make health funding a priority for all politicians, sign up to be a supporter of the campaign here.

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We are a professional association and union of 47,000 people who care deeply about others. If we use our voice to say ‘health matters’, we have the power to make it better for patients, but also for ourselves.

Memo Musa

NZNO Chief Executive

Nurse


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Don’t block good health

By NZNO President, Grant Brookes.

Housing protest Grant

NZNO President Grant Brookes at ‘The Block’ housing protest in Auckland.

This might be a strange way to begin a nursing blog, but Season Five of The Block NZ is drawing to a close.

The top-rating programme has gripped viewers for the last two months. As eight young New Zealanders in their twenties and thirties competed for a chance at home ownership, we shared their yearning.

But this season has also attracted controversy, screening at a time of heightened awareness about the growing housing crisis.

In hindsight, it’s odd that it took five seasons. The appeal of the programme has been so strong all along because the goal of home ownership – or even a secure, affordable tenancy – is increasingly unattainable.

Last weekend I joined a protest at The Block NZ Open Home in the upmarket suburb of Meadowbank. I went along to support a group from NZNO.

It might sound shocking, but rising house prices mean that NZNO members are now starting to join the ranks of the “working poor” – people who don’t have enough left over, after accommodation costs, to pay the bills and feed the kids.

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NZNO delegate and RN Hamish Hutchinson at ‘The Block’ housing protest.

If the average Staff Nurse, working full time was somehow able to save a 20% deposit, then to buy an average-priced house in Meadowbank they’d need to spend about 90% of their income on mortgage repayments. So buying one of The Block NZ houses is clearly not an option.

But sadly, things are heading the same way across other parts of the country. A mortgage on an average-priced house anywhere in New Zealand would consume over half of a Staff Nurse’s income. And as house prices rise, so of course do rents.

But I also went along to the protest because adequate housing is essential for health.

Skyrocketing house prices (and rents to match) have recently put the issue of homelessness into the spotlight. But they also cause the less visible problem of household overcrowding.

Researchers at He Kainga Oranga, the Health and Housing Research Programme at Wellington’s Medical School, have been looking at the health impact.

In one study, they found that one in 10 hospital admissions to treat infectious diseases are the direct result of household crowding. For Māori and Pacific peoples, the figure jumps to one in five.

The researchers examined nine major categories of infectious disease — gastroenteritis, hepatitis A, Helicobacter pylori infection, pneumonia and lower respiratory infections, upper respiratory infections, Haemophilus influenzae disease, bronchiolitis, meningococcal disease and tuberculosis. They estimated that household crowding causes more than 1,300 hospital admissions a year, and even some deaths.

“Most of the diseases in the study have especially high rates in children”, said lead investigator Professor Michael Baker. “Children are more susceptible to meningococcal disease, gastroenteritis, pneumonia and most other infectious diseases, and our analysis shows that their risk is strongly associated with exposure to household crowding”.

The Block NZ is about houses as money-making opportunities, rather than homes for people to live in. Even as it appeals to us, it glamorises the competitive race which is shutting more and more people out of a warm, dry and affordable home.

But the show is not responsible for the housing crisis, or the toll it is taking on health. That responsibility lies with the Government.

The protest at their Open Home was a chance to again send the message that everyone – whether they can afford a $1m house or not – needs somewhere dry and safe to live.