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Nurse short-staffing in Bahrain
Most of the piece consists of reported complaints by Salmaniya Medical Complex chairman Dr. Nabeel Al Ansari about the lack of nurses in the hospital's ED. Dr. Al Ansari is quoted as saying that the department needs 192 nurses, but has only 92--a vacancy rate of over 50%. He blames "bureaucratic delays" at the Civil Service Bureau, which apparently controls relevant paperwork. Dr. Al Ansari notes that he does not care whether the nurses are Bahrainis are not--evidently only 50 of the 92 current nurses are--because he does "not want to risk patients' [lives] on the basis of a nationality issue." We applaud this linkage of nursing and life-saving. Dr. Al Ansari also notes that the government has taken steps to resolve a shortage of physicians. Apparently the department now has 42 of the 45 physicians it needs, including eight recently recruited from Egypt and India. Dr. Al Ansari notes that he finds the nurse staffing situation "really frustrating," and says that he "cannot wait anymore. The authorities can recruit nurses temporarily through nursing agencies until the formalities for recruiting permanent staff are completed." The piece also includes some discussion of the specific effects of a lack of nurses. Dr. Al Ansari explains that the current nurses have to work double shifts and overtime:
Of course, there is certainly more to say about the effects of short-staffing, including its key role in nursing burnout and turnover. Moreover, nurses themselves are often good sources of information about nursing. But the overall tenor of the discussion and Dr. Al Ansari's almost desperate pleas do underline the importance of sufficient nursing staff to patient care. And his comments about the more aggressive actions taken to resolve the shortage of physicians suggest that some may not see good nurse staffing as being the high priority that he does. We thank Soman Baby and the Gulf Daily News for this article. See the article "SMC stretched by nurse shortage" by Soman Baby in the January 30, 2006 edition of the Daily News of Bahrain.
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The URL for this page is www.nursingadvocacy.org/news/2006/jan/30_bahrain.html |
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