Better protection, working conditions for nurses urged
The International Council of Nurses is calling for better protection and working conditions for nurses on the front lines of the pandemic.
Many nurses caring for COVID-19 patients are suffering burn-out or psychological distress, and many have faced abuse or discrimination outside of work, the International Council of Nurses (ICN) said in a Reuters report.
Supplies of personal protective equipment for nurses and other health workers in some care homes remain insufficient, it said, marking World Mental Health Day on Saturday.
“We are extremely concerned about the mental health impact on nurses,” Howard Catton, a British nurse who is the ICN’s CEO, told Reuters Television at the association’s headquarters in Geneva.
“Our most recent survey of national nurses’ associations shows that more than 70 percent of them (the associations) were saying that nurses have been subject to violence or discrimination and as a result of that they are very concerned about extreme cases of psychological distress and mental health pressure,” he said.
The figure was based on responses from roughly a quarter of its national nurses’ associations in more than 130 countries.
Nurses face a broad spectrum of issues that affect their mental health, including physical and verbal abuse, Catton said.
“There are nurses who have been subject to discrimination, where their landlord has not renewed their lease for their apartment, or they can’t get child care for their children,” he said.