I am a Nurse
We are largely getting a one sided argument here. Nursing used to be a 3 year course and it was extended out to 4 years just for the sake of (a) Filling the respective university/hospital course and (b) To replace nursing staff on holidays/career breaks/flexitime-hours/reduced hours etc.
We are being told that it takes €90,000 to train a nurse plus what it costs mom and dad to keep the student in 'college.'
Student Nurses are paid €12.36 per hour gross Basic Wages during their placement. They must work the hours appropriated to them and in the hospital appointed. Please note the hospital can be anywhere within the university greater area e.g a nursing student in Limerick can be ordered to work in say Nenagh hospital. The nurse must fund the travel, accommodation etc and be expected to work split attendances etc.
When a nurse qualifies from university he/she must emigrate to find work. I understand the UK is crying out for our highly trained nurses.
Our Training Hospitals do not employ nurses that they trained. I challenge anybody on here to supply truthful info about Training Hospitals that employed its own qualified nurses. I can say this because I know the truth.
Nurses and Student Nurses must report for duty in the ward at least 20 minutes before commencement time to ensure an easy handover. Also, they must remain in the ward 20 mins extra and unpaid on finishing the day/night to hand over to the next nurses.
This is fairly cheap labour for the responsibility even student nurses have. I should point out that a Student Nurse even on his/her first day in the ward will make more responsible decisions than any other profession.
Please people, know what you are talking about
I am a Nurse. The €90,000 figure is what it costs us the taxpayer....not mom and dad! And remember, nurses do actually get a qualification that is transferrable to most parts of this world! And if people cant afford the expense of going to college to do nursing....well dont go!
I too came out with a university based qualification....and I also done unpaid placements all over the place throughout all my years in uni. I had to travel between sites, and no transport was laid on either. We also worked f/t hours throughout my years at college, and that was in addition to attending college, doing essay's, exams etc. We worked w/e's, night-shifts, bank holiday's, christmas, easter and the new year and we didnt get paid one £ in a salary for any of it. In our final unit, we also done f/t hours on clinical placement for months prior to our graduation.
Our main means of financial support throughout our training was a minimal bursary with focus on the minimal, and many of us did manage to survive on it, and we done this, through not living beyond their means, not taking out mortgages as students, and by budgeting accordingly. We also had to pay for accomodation, and for travel between different sites across the health district. Most of us also done agency on our day's off as HCA's. And tbh, agency did become virtually impossible towards the end of our training with the demands of placements....and many of us had no other option but to give it up....and focus on our training and final exams.
Yes I wont lie, it was difficult juggling placements, college and agency....but we fully recognised that we were getting a qualification out of it....
And after my year qualified, only one or two out of a intake of 120 managed to get work as a staff nurse in any hospital within our health district.
But, I suppose it comes down to your own views and attitudes, and whether you believe that having put you through uni, you then have some automatic right to expect a job to be there for you in the hospital where you trained.
Furthermore, this is being phased in over a couple of years. So many of these student nurses who are currently protesting wont actually be affected by any of this. Those who will be affected are those who just put in their CAO application....and when they put it in they knew full well that in all likelihood that payment wont be there for their fourth year of placement.
This really riles me up.