IV drug users demanding say in needle exchange services
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9 hours ago
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Christchurch nurses regularly in tears over staff shortages
Nurse Bruce MacIntosh joined other nurses on strike in Christchurch today. Photo: RNZ/Rachel Graham A Christchurch nurse, who joined others on strike this afternoon , says staff shortages are so bad he is regularly seeing colleagues in tears. Nurses from theatre, post-anaesthetic care and radiology wards at Christchurch Hospital walked off the job from 2 to 4pm on Friday over a breakdown of collective bargaining. About 80 supporters and nurses gathered in Hagley Park, across the road from Christchurch Hospital, waving flags and posters calling for safe staffing. New Zealand Nurses Organisation delegate and operating theatre assistant Bruce MacIntosh said he is constantly seeing the impact of the staffing shortages. "Its incredible when you go around the wards, and see it like we do and meet with the delegates regularly. It is a crisis. Some of the delegates are crying on the night shift when they can't fill the (staffing) spots," said MacIntosh. "It is risky for the nurses, because if something goes wrong their name is on the block, which is a risk to their practice. So, not only is there risk to the patients, but also risk to the practitioners, the nurses." Nurse Averil Cooper said she too was making a stand for the safety of the patients and nurses' registration. "We have no staff, very little staff. They are run ragged and putting their scope of practice and registration on the line," said Cooper. She said the staff are dealing with chaos every day. Gayl Marryatt, a registered nurse and NZNO delegate, said the strike was part of a rolling strike being taken by the union. She said it was to highlight that multiple parts of the hospital are being affected by the short staffing. Nurses planned to hold nation-wide industrial action on 2 September and 4 September. Health NZ said contingency plans were in place during the strike. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
9 hours ago
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RNZ News
16 hours ago
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School calendar set to change in Samoa as schools closed for another week
Photo: 123RF Samoa's Ministry of Education and Culture chief executive A'eau Christopher Hazelman says the school term calendar is set to change due to prolonged dengue-related closures. Primary school students in Samoa will have a fourth week of school closure next week, while years 8 to 12 are going into a third week. A'eau said the week of 11 August would have been week three of term three. "Beginning from our ECE (early childhood education) centres through the years one to year seven, they have not had any classes over the last three weeks," he said. "On the first week of term three we had the years eight right up to year 12. "I want to make sure that people understand that the moment cabinet activated the NEOC - the National Emergency Operations Committee - this is when we now follow the law, the actual Act and the frameworks of NEOC within government - hence the ministry will not make a decision by itself." A'eau said T-Vet providers and those in universities have also been affected. He also thanked school teachers and principals for making classes available online, but said they need to look at changes. Further adding to the time, the government has announced public holiday on 28 and 29 August for the general election . "We now have to look at making amendments and changes to our school calendar," A'eau said. "I want to make this very clear to all schools and to all parents - we are going to change the school calendar, even to the point that there may be no school holidays between term three and term four to make up the time." A'eau said they will also look at changing the dates of the national assessments. There have been six dengue-related deaths and nearly 8000 clinically-diagnosed cases recorded in Samoa since January.