Tharaka
Nithi nurses strike point to failed health devolution
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
T
|
hat health workers
have stayed put and vowed to continue with their strike at the expense of patients
points to a failed take off of transfer of the health function from the
national government to the county governments.
The
nurses refused to return to work after their May salaries were paid in full.
They raised other issues like calling on the governor Samuel Ragwa to sack the
Health executive Magdalene Njeru who accused the nurses of stealing medicine
from the hospitals in Chuka General Hospital.
The
nurses are obliged by their professional code of conduct to prioritize the plight
of the patients at all times. The Hippocratic Oath holds and any professional
doctor should be compassionate to the plight of the patients, majority of whom
are poor to seek medical attention to private health facilities.
Graft Claims
As
a result, the patients from Tharaka Nithi County have transferred to Meru and
Embu teaching and referral hospitals. The claims of health workers stealing
public medicine from public hospitals should be investigated and culpable
nurses be prosecuted. It is alleged that the nurses have opened private clinics
in town where they stuff the siphoned drugs which they recommend to their
patients who are told that the drugs have ran out of supply. Medical dishonesty
is a serious crime at a time when negligence among the medical fraternity have
hit the local headlines.
Rightly,
governor Ragwa maintains that the nurses must return to work since their dues
have been paid. Any continued standoff will only lead to more needless
suffering and at worse loss of lives.
IFMIS
There
is also an urgent need for the national government to streamline the Integrated
Financial Management Information System (IFMIS) which is blamed for the delays
in paying publics` servants including nurses and other professionals. It will also
help for the county governments to partner with banks to ensure that nurses get
their salary within the shortest time. Above all, patience and dialogue should
prevail for the nurses who are educated enough to know the consequences of
their strike on the ordinary citizens.
Mr.
Ragwa has welcomed consultations with the nurses in a move expected to stem
suffering among the patients. No amount of grandstanding will help the nurses.
They should eat a humble pie and know that regardless of their duties they owe service
delivery to Kenyans and must serve them selflessly and steer clear of politics
and sideshows.
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