‘We Are Overworked And Underpaid’: Young Maltese Nurse Appeals For Support Amid Critical Staff Shortage
A young Maltese nurse has appealed for support and proper action amidst the critical staff shortage that is being experienced by Malta’s health sector.
Submitting an anonymous letter to local media houses, the nurse highlighted the disrespect experienced on a daily basis, leading to frustration and the situation becoming more and more precarious.
This comes after the Malta Union for Midwives and Nurses just terminated a three-week-long industrial dispute initiated over disagreements with the government.
The nurse has chosen to remain anonymous for her own safety within the industry, fearing retribution, but you can read the full letter below.
I am a young nurse. I studied to become a nurse because I wanted to give care. I did it because I wanted to give something to society, to my people.
But just a few years down the line, I’m beginning to see that what we call “care” others just see as a job we are “paid” to do. And the disrespect towards us just keeps growing day by day to the point that we are completely at a loss.
Many are opting to leave. And the situation just keeps becoming more and more precarious.
This is leaving us feeling extremely frustrated.
We are overworked and underpaid. And because we are putting our foot down to get the pay and conditions we deserve, we are being vilified.
To add insult to injury, no one seems to be standing up for us.
A stark contrast to other countries, where civilians went out onto the streets to ensure their nurses are fairly paid.
Where are the people who clapped for us during COVID? Is a clap all our work was worth?
It is true, we have a vocation, but a vocation does not pay bills, buy houses or enable us to continue studying in our fields. At the end of the day, everyone goes to work to be able to live and buy basic needs, what is different for us nurses?
Do people expect us to work for peanuts and be happy about it? It is not enough that we work 12-hour shifts, adding up to 46-hour weeks (which we are not paid overtime for). It is not enough that we work public holidays and Sundays whilst others enjoy family meals or celebrations. It is not enough that we need to go to work whether there is a pandemic going on or not, even though everyone else (INCLUDING hospital personnel) were working from home.
During the pandemic, only nurses were at the hospital 24/7, whilst other professions worked either on a 50% basis or none at all. Some healthcare professionals are still refusing to have contact with COVID patients! This was never an option for nurses! Most of us had to leave our own homes to protect our family members and this was all done without any remuneration.
Being a nurse is not easy – It takes a toll both physically and emotionally.
We are nurses because we want to be there for others during the worst times of their lives. We want to help those in need and try to make their hospital stay just a tiny bit better.
This however does not entitle others to treat us like slaves, working for scraps whilst doing the ‘dirtiest work’. Right now we are expected to provide the same level of care, whether we are 2 nurses or 10.
This is not only impossible but unsafe for our patients! We are seen as just a number but are expected to deliver impeccable care. This is all exacerbated when something goes awry and the nurse becomes the scapegoat. For example, elective orthopedic operations have had a huge backload for years. Whilst orthopedic trauma operations are done after days if not weeks. The current excuse is the nurse’s strike!
As though that wasn’t enough, instead of looking out for its staff and fighting for their rights, the management of MDH is further fomenting public ‘hate’ by allowing the patient to come in for their operation, while well aware that these ops won’t take place due to the longstanding backlog, and then intentionally informing the patient just minutes before, making us nurses seem like monsters.
And should one of us so much as make a formal complaint or speak to the media, we can be sure of retribution.
This is the way we are being treated. There is already a critical shortage of staff. If we are forced to work under these conditions, in a very short while there will hardly be a Maltese nurse left working at Mater Dei. We only want a fair collective agreement that is in line with other professions.
Nurses are the backbone of all hospitals worldwide.
Do you think local nurses need more support?