logo
Nurse pay 'lagging behind' public sector, union says

Nurse pay 'lagging behind' public sector, union says

Yahoo28-05-2025

Pay for nurses in Wales is at a "standstill" and "lagging behind" other public sector workers, according to a union.
Nurses have been offered a 3.6% pay rise for this financial year, below the offer for other NHS staff including doctors and dentists.
The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) Wales has asked whether "downtrodden" nurses "have got the fight in them" to go back on strike.
The Welsh government said it had accepted the recommendations made by the independent NHS pay review body in full and was working to ensure staff receive the pay increase and back pay "as soon as possible".
Nurses and teachers get above inflation pay rise
School strikes 'now unlikely' after 5.5% pay offer
Announcing the pay offer, Wales' Health Secretary Jeremy Miles said nurses provided "exceptional care", adding their services were "truly appreciated".
The minister accepted the advice of the NHS pay review body, including a 4% pay increase for doctors and dentists, and what has been described as an average rise of 5.4% for resident doctors, until recently known as junior doctors.
Speaking to BBC Walescast, Nicky Hughes, RCN Wales' associate director of nursing, said the Welsh government should "respect all professions and provide equal pay or at least parity across all the public sectors".
"Yet for the second year in a row we find that nurses...are lagging behind and that really shows a complete disrespect for the profession."
With the rise in everyday prices currently running at 3.5%, Ms Hughes said the 3.6% award for nurses was "about on inflation".
She added the cost of living crisis, particularly for food, was also an issue.
"We know that nurses are using food banks so, at the moment, what we're saying is, nurses deserve more."
Ms Hughes also pointed to the 2,000 nursing vacancies in Wales, out of a workforce of about 40,000.
She said the offer did not reflect nurses' work in recent months in reducing NHS waiting lists.
In March, the number of patients waiting two years or more for planned treatment stood at 8,389 - its lowest point since April 2021.
The RCN Wales will consult its members on the pay offer.
Welsh nurses voted to go on strike several times at the end of 2022 and the start of 2023.
Asked whether RCN members were willing to return to the picket lines, Ms Hughes said it would be "very difficult" currently.
"They're tired, they're burnt out, they're trying to do the best for their patients that they can," she said.
"So, although there will be an appetite with some of our members to go on strike, we will have to see where they go because they do feel very downtrodden at the moment.
Ms Hughes added nurses were fighting "every day" to get through their shift, make sure patients had safe care, and to ensure colleagues were looked after
A Welsh government spokesperson said: "We have accepted the recommendations made by the independent NHS Pay Review Body in full and are working to ensure that staff will receive both the pay increase and back pay as soon as possible.
"We greatly value the nursing and midwifery workforce in Wales and the vital work they do."
Watch Walescast at 22:40 BST on BBC One Wales or catch up on iPlayer. It is also available on BBC Sounds.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Deadline for spring COVID-19 booster approaching - who can get it
Deadline for spring COVID-19 booster approaching - who can get it

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Deadline for spring COVID-19 booster approaching - who can get it

The NHS in West Yorkshire has encouraged eligible individuals to get a COVID-19 booster before the current vaccination campaign ends on Tuesday, June 17. The booster is being offered to people aged 75 and over, residents in care homes for older adults, and anyone aged six months and over with a weakened immune system. A spokesperson said: "This includes people who have or are receiving treatment for conditions such as diabetes, blood cancer, organ transplant, HIV, or those taking medicines that weaken the immune system, such as high-dose steroids or immunosuppressants following cancer treatment." Dr James Thomas, medical director for the West Yorkshire Integrated Care Board and a Leeds-based GP, said: "Vaccination remains the best way to protect yourself and those around you from the serious effects of COVID-19. "The virus hasn't gone away, and those most at risk can still become seriously unwell. "If you're eligible for the spring booster, please don't miss this opportunity – book now or visit a walk-in pharmacy before June 17." Appointments can be booked through the NHS App, online at or by calling 119. Some walk-in pharmacies are also available across West Yorkshire. A full definition of immunosuppression can be found in Chapter 14a (table 3) of the Green Book:

East of England to get 29 new ambulances
East of England to get 29 new ambulances

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

East of England to get 29 new ambulances

The East of England will receive 29 new ambulances to help deliver faster emergency care for patients. The new ambulances will replace ageing vehicles in the organisation's fleet by March 2026. More than £4.5m will be invested in the new vehicles for the East of England Ambulance Trust as part of a nationwide rollout. Health Secretary Wes Streeting said the vehicles would "make a real difference to patients". The rollout follows the government's new package of investment and reforms to improve patients' experiences of urgent and emergency care this year. This included caring for more patients in the community, rather than in hospital. Backed by about £450m of funding, the plan aimed to deliver about 40 new Same Day Emergency Care and Urgent Treatment Centres. It also aimed to create up to 15 mental health crisis assessment centres so patients can avoid waiting in A&E for hours for care. About 500 new ambulances will be provided to services nationwide. Streeting said: "These 29 new ambulances will make a real difference to patients in the East of England, replacing old and tired vehicles and getting to patients in minutes, rather than hours. "We can't fix more than a decade of underinvestment and neglect overnight. But through the measures we're setting out today, we will deliver faster and more convenient care for patients in emergencies." Follow East of England news on X, Instagram and Facebook: BBC Beds, Herts & Bucks, BBC Cambridgeshire, BBC Essex, BBC Norfolk, BBC Northamptonshire or BBC Suffolk. NHS staff face unprecedented job losses, says boss Two ambulance 999 call centres to close NHS merger and job losses planned amid 50% cut East of England Ambulance Service NHS Trust

We always joked dad looked nothing like his parents - then we found out why
We always joked dad looked nothing like his parents - then we found out why

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

We always joked dad looked nothing like his parents - then we found out why

Matthew's dad had brown eyes and black hair. His grandparents had piercing blue eyes. There was a running joke in his family that "dad looked nothing like his parents", the teacher from southern England says. It turned out there was a very good reason for this. Matthew's father had been swapped at birth in hospital nearly 80 years ago. He died late last year before learning the truth of his family history. Matthew - not his real name - contacted the BBC after we reported on the case of Susan, who received compensation from an NHS trust after a home DNA test revealed she had been accidentally switched for another baby in the 1950s. BBC News is now aware of five cases of babies swapped by mistake in maternity wards from the late 1940s to the 1960s. Lawyers say they expect more people to come forward driven by the increase in cheap genetic testing. During the pandemic, Matthew started looking for answers to niggling questions about his family history. He sent off a saliva sample in the post to be analysed. The genealogy company entered his record into its vast online database, allowing him to view other users whose DNA closely matched his own. "Half of the names I'd just never heard of," he says. "I thought, 'That's weird', and called my wife to tell her the old family joke might be true after all." Matthew then asked his dad to submit his own DNA sample, which confirmed he was even more closely related to the same group of mysterious family members. Matthew started exchanging messages with two women who the site suggested were his father's cousins. All were confused about how they could possibly be related. Working together, they eventually tracked down birth records from 1946, months after the end of World War Two. The documents showed that one day after his father was apparently born, another baby boy had been registered at the same hospital in east London. That boy had the same relatively unusual surname that appeared on the mystery branch of the family tree, a link later confirmed by birth certificates obtained by Matthew. It was a lightbulb moment. "I realised straight away what must have happened," he says. "The only explanation that made sense was that both babies got muddled up in hospital." Matthew and the two women managed to construct a brand new family tree based on all of his DNA matches. "I love a puzzle and I love understanding the past," he says. "I'm quite obsessive anyway, so I got into trying to reverse engineer what had happened." Before World War Two, most babies in the UK were born at home, or in nursing homes, attended by midwives and the family doctor. That started to change as the country prepared for the launch of the NHS in 1948, and very gradually, more babies were delivered in hospital, where newborns were typically removed for periods to be cared for in nurseries. "The baby would be taken away between feeds so that the mother could rest, and the baby could be watched by either a nursery nurse or midwife," says Terri Coates, a retired lecturer in midwifery, and former clinical adviser on BBC series Call The Midwife. "It may sound paternalistic, but midwives believed they were looking after mums and babies incredibly well." It was common for new mothers to be kept in hospital for between five and seven days, far longer than today. To identify newborns in the nursery, a card would be tied to the end of the cot with the baby's name, mother's name, the date and time of birth, and the baby's weight. "Where cots rather than babies were labelled, accidents could easily happen", says Ms Coates, who trained as a nurse herself in the 1970s and a midwife in 1981. "If there were two or more members of staff in the nursery feeding babies, for example, a baby could easily be put down in the wrong cot." By 1956, hospital births were becoming more common, and midwifery textbooks were recommending that a "wrist name-tape" or "string of lettered china beads" should be attached directly to the newborn. A decade later, by the mid-1960s, it was rare for babies to be removed from the delivery room without being individually labelled. Stories of babies being accidentally switched in hospital were very rare at the time, though more are now coming to light thanks to the boom in genetic testing and ancestry websites. The day after Jan Daly was born at a hospital in north London in 1951, her mother immediately complained that the baby she had been given was not hers. "She was really stressed and crying, but the nurses assured her she was wrong and the doctor was called in to try to calm her," Jan says. The staff only backed down when her mum told them she'd had a fast, unassisted delivery, and pointed out the clear forceps marks on the baby's head "I feel for the other mother who had been happily feeding me for two days and then had to give up one baby for another," she says. "There was never any apology, it was just 'one of those silly errors', but the trauma affected my mother for a long time." Matthew's father, an insurance agent from the Home Counties, was a keen amateur cyclist who spent his life following the local racing scene. He lived alone in retirement and over the last decade his health had been deteriorating. Matthew thought long and hard about telling him the truth about his family history but, in the end, decided against it. "I just felt my dad doesn't need this," he says. "He had lived 78 years in a type of ignorance, so it didn't feel right to share it with him." Matthew's father died last year without ever knowing he'd been celebrating his birthday a day early for the past eight decades. Since then, Matthew has driven to the West Country to meet his dad's genetic first cousin and her daughter for coffee. They all got on well, he says, sharing old photos and "filling in missing bits of family history". But Matthew has decided not to contact the man his father must have been swapped with as a baby, or his children – in part because they have not taken DNA tests themselves. "If you do a test by sending your saliva off, then there's an implicit understanding that you might find something that's a bit of a surprise," Matthew says. "Whereas with people who haven't, I'm still not sure if it's the right thing to reach out to them - I just don't think it's right to drop that bombshell." Woman contacted by stranger on DNA site - and the truth about her birth unravelled Swapped at birth: How two women discovered they weren't who they thought they were Canadians switched at birth get an apology 70 years on

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store