By LYNAIRE MUNNINGS
Tribune Staff Reporter
lmunnings@tribunemedia.net
HEALTH and Wellness Minister Dr Michael Darville said 18 specialty Ghanaian nurses will arrive in the Bahamas to help relieve the shortage of nurses.
On Friday, Dr Darville said the nurses will be in the country by the end of the month.
“I would like to see them in the country before the end of the month,” said Dr Darville on the sidelines of The Ministry of Health and Wellness Leadership Forum’s opening ceremony.
“I believe we will be able to accomplish that so that we can fill a lot of gaps of specialty nurses that exist at the Princess Margaret Hospital and some at the Rand Memorial Hospital.
“And to be able to improve the delivery of quality services that we want to provide at our hospitals and take a lot of burdens from a lot of our specialty nurses who are working a lot of overtime and we don't want them to burn out. So we look forward to these nurses to come to the country.”
There has been continuing nurses shortages in the country with many frontline workers continuously complaining of exhaustion – both physically and mentally.
Dr Darville noted the significance of the Ghanaian nurses, saying they will help in the fight to provide quality service in the country.
“I want the Bahamian people to know that while we are recruiting, developed countries are recruiting in our country and it's a burden that we currently face on a daily basis.
“We're not alone in the Caribbean, other Caribbean colleagues and ministers of health are constantly presenting this issue of excessive recruitment in the Caribbean and the Bahamas is no exception.
“But for us at the Ministry of Health and Wellness, it is our responsibility to do all that we need to ensure that these services are provided in the country and that requires going outside and recruiting from abroad.
“So, we look forward to the nurses coming from Ghana into the country to help us to deliver quality health care services, not only in Grand Bahama and New Providence, but throughout the country.”
Last month, Public Hospital Authority Managing Director Aubynette Rolle said that officials were making various attempts to address the nursing shortage in the country.
She noted that the government was expecting nurses from Ghana, the Philippines and potentially India.
More like this story
- Nurses union says arrival of 18 Ghanian nurses wont solve sector’s problems
- Darville: 50 nurses from Ghana and Cuba to bring relief next week
- Help arrives as 18 Ghanaian nurses report for duty to address shortage
- Minister of Health: Country seeing a rise in chronic diseases
- Minister: Talks are under way to train more nurses
Comments
hrysippus 1 year ago
With 8 to 10 thousand Bahamians unemployed it is sad that none of these unemployed people are either willing, qualified enough, or able to train in the nursing profession.
AnObserver 1 year ago
Decades of our "leaders" preaching that working a service job makes you "lesser than" has come around to bite us in the ass. Who'd a thunk?
BONEFISH 1 year ago
@An Observer.The Bahamas a service economy based on tourism and financial services. Nursing is a very complex and demanding profession. It goes beyond bathing patients and emptying slop pans.The salaries and working conditions for nurses in the government service is not good. Add to that ,the recruitment of bahamian nurses by foreign agencies. Salaries and benefits are better aboard in the US, Canada and parts of Europe.
GodSpeed 1 year ago
Nurses probably get paid terrible, I'd bet that's why. A few I've known left to go to the US to work.
hrysippus 1 year ago
Yes, nurses are probably underpaid, the work is hard, both mentally and physically, and is often shift work. I spent almost a year in my youth working as a n auxiliary nurse, but it was a better choice than being unemployed.
bahamianson 1 year ago
Everyone is underpaid beside financial and hotel executives. Well, we need some new genes in the Bahamas. Bahamian fellas, grab a wife . These ladies will marry and stay here.
GodSpeed 1 year ago
If they're from Ghana then genetically they might as well be Bahamian.
hrysippus 1 year ago
Bahamianpun. Your suggestion has merit worth gestation.
trueBahamian 1 year ago
Are they serious. Nurses have left this country in droves for better opportunities in the US. You treat nurses like crap and you expect them to stay. They fought over paychecks, work conditions, health insurance, etc. It's very simple Dr. Darville, treat people with respect and they stay and you won't be going all over the globe to look for replacements.
FreeportFreddy 1 year ago
50 years and resorting to nurses from Ghana??
Great job! That's sarcasm.
Happy New Day!!
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