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My Dinner with Archy
The article does not name the nurses or give any further information about them, nor does it name the companies involved. Naming the nurses would have indicated that this kind of activism by health professionals merits specific public recognition. Naming the companies would have given the public important consumer information; in the online comments to the piece, readers criticized the article for failing to do so. However, the piece does lay out the nurses' specific concerns about the bottled water. One nurse found a cockroach. Another found the company's labeling paper inside the bottles. Another bottle contained unspecified "contamination." After the nurses' complaints were filed, inspectors reportedly "seized" the two cartons of water, which the nurses had bought for personal use. The inspectors tested the water and found it unfit for human consumption. The inspectors then reportedly visited the water companies, and found "a number of violations." The companies were later fined.
The nurses' actions also at least suggest to the public a broader view of nursing than most people now get, a view that encompasses forceful advocacy to promote community health. The piece could have brought this out more, perhaps through a quote noting that this is what nurses do (or should do). But the fact that the piece identified the water activists as nurses, and that it ran in the health section, at least implies that the nurses are public health advocates. See the article "Nurses open water bottle to find cockroach" by Nasouh Nazzal from the August 15, 2007 edition of The Gulf News. You may add comments on the bottom of the article's page.
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The URL for this page is www.nursingadvocacy.org/news/2007/aug/15_gulfnews.html |
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