Heroic Kenyan Nurse Who Saved Baby Receives Sh100,000

Sinino Abdullahi is not just another run-of-the-mill medic in a public hospital. The 30-year-old nurse at Kimanju Hospital in Laikipia North takes her profession as a calling, and believes in the Nghtingale Pledge of devoting herself to the welfare of those committed to her care.

And when she stood yesterday to receive Sh100,000 reward from Governor Ndiritu Muriithi, her heroism and compassion that saved an abandoned infant, came to light.

Ms Abdullahi yesterday narrated how she rescued a baby, who had been abandoned by its 16-year-old mother, in Musul.

Being ridiculed

The girl had concealed her pregnancy from her family and schoolmates for fear of being ridiculed. She resorted to killing the baby to keep up the pretence of not being pregnant.

According to Abdullahi, the Standard Eight pupil delivered the baby by herself in her bedroom and hid the child under the bed, stuffing its mouth with cow dung.

Worried that somebody would find out that she had a baby in the house, the girl hid the baby in the grass, the nurse recounted.

Children who were playing nearby stumbled on the baby and alerted  neighbours.

“I received a call from for a community health volunteer informing me about the abandoned baby. I took an ambulance and rushed to Musul about 10km from Kimanju Hospital,” she said.

By the time she got to the scene, the baby’s skin was turning bluish due to lack of oxygen and excessive exposure to cold.

“We rushed the baby to the hospital and and tests revealed the cow dung had caused an infection. The baby was in a bad shape and weighed 1.2kg,” she said, adding the teenage mother had also tried to strangle the baby.

“She did not want to see her baby. Her mother was also angry at her but we counselled them and they accepted to take care of the child,” said Abdullahi.

The baby was later discharged and the mother taken through the Kangaroo mother care programme, where she had to maintain a skin-to-skin touch with the baby to normalise its body temperatures.

Ms Abdullahi’s act of compassion and dedication saw her recognised by the county leadership. She was promoted and received Sh100,000 for going an extra mile in service delivery.

The nurse was also recognised for her dedication in preventing two babies from being infected with HIV by their mothers.

She delivered Nevirapine Syrup – a medicine that prevents mother-to-child HIV transmission – to two HIV-positive mothers, who had refused to be put under medication to protect their babies.

The nurse was awarded alongside three other women ? one in Laikipia East and two in Western Laikipia.

The governor said he introduced the quarterly award programme to motivate workers and encourage commitment among civil servants.

Dedicated workers

“We want to have a dedicated public service and change the attitude towards work,” said Muriithi, adding four employees received Sh100,000 each.

Another nurse was also awarded for initiating an immunisation plan by collecting vaccines from Wiyumiririe Hospital to Karigui-ini dispensary using a boda boda.  The medic did this to ensure newborns don’t miss their immunisation due to lack of a refrigerator at the dispensary.
Source :Standard Digital

Top Tips for UK NMC OSCE for Nurses

Top 10 tips for all stations

1. Nothing below the elbow. This includes watches. Wash your hands at the beginning with soap and water, and at the end, if you have time, of every station. There are usually 2 marks for doing this (which can make a difference in a station that’s not gone well).

2. Introduce yourself to the patient, clarify their identity and what they wish to be called.

3. Identify the allergy status before you start any procedure.

4. Ask the patient re pain, comfort, if they require the toilet and privacy before you start any procedure.

5. Be polite. Thank your patient (they are often real patients giving up their own free time, thank your examiner too.) and give them the call bell.

6. Be gentle. Remember the patient may have been examined 10 or 20 times before you. It doesn’t look good to your examiner if the patient appears in pain.

7. Look smart. Although there are no points for this it gives the examiner a sense that you are taking the exam seriously. Tie your hair back

8. If you’re unsure of what is being asked of you ask your examiner for clarification. You won’t lose marks for this but will do if you go on to perform the incorrect skill.

9. If you remember something that you should have done earlier then go back and do this. Again you will not lose marks for having the order wrong but will do if you completely forget an important part.

10. If the examiner has left out equipment for you then use it. E.g. if a station has gloves and aprons use them.

Nigeria CPC Patients’ Bill of Rights

The consumer protection council in Nigeria today launches the Patient Bill of Rights. Below is the full Bill of Rights that healthcare practioners and patients should be aware of.

 

Blood Donation Facts and Myths: Well you Have To know

World Blood Donor Day is celebrated every year on June 14 to thank blood donors who save lives every day. It also encourages people all over the world to donate blood voluntarily. It is one of the eight global public health campaigns marked by the World Health Organisation. We need to donate blood because every two seconds, a person requires blood.

 

There are some very common myths regarding blood donation that prevent people from coming forward and donating blood regularly.

 

Let’s bust 13 myths that hold you back from being a blood donor

 

Myth 1: Blood donation hurts

 

Fact: The needle prick is the only pain one feels when donating blood. The area on the arm heals within a day or two. The weakness post donating blood can be dealt with by drinking plenty of water and eating.

 

Myth 2: If you smoke, you cannot be a blood donor

 

Fact: You can donate even if you are smoker. However, you must be at least 17 years old and weigh at least 50 kilograms. Also, you should avoid smoking for three hours after donating blood and also stay away from alcohol for 24 hours.

 

Myth 3: Donating blood makes the immune system weak.

 

Fact: There is no such lasting danger to the immune system when you donate blood. While the Red Blood Cells return to normal within a few days, the White Blood Cells take a few weeks, however, if the body finds itself in danger, they can be produced quickly.

 

Myth 4: Blood donation is time consuming.

 

Fact: Blood donation takes 45 minutes to an hour only. The donation process itself takes barely 10-12 minutes, but the entire process from filling out forms to taking refreshments after donation takes that amount of time.

 

Myth 5: Blood donors become obese

 

Fact: Blood donation doesn’t affect your body weight at all, it remains unchanged unless you decide to reward yourself with too much junk post-donation — and that is your responsibility and has nothing to do with blood donation.

 

Myth 6: People who weigh heavier are eligible for donating blood, those who weigh lighter aren’t.

 

Fact: As long as you weigh above 50 kgs, donating blood has nothing more to do with your weight — only because a person below that weight would probably have to face relatively more weakness issues than a person who is above 50 kgs. Also, your weight has nothing to do with the amount of blood your body produces!

 

Myth 7: If you’re diabetic, blood donation isn’t for you.

 

Fact: You cannot donate blood only and only if you take supplements to fix your diabetes, like insulin. You CAN donate blood if you control your diabetes with the help of lifestyle changes and pills. Those who have heart problems and blood pressure from type 2 diabetes, however, might not be able to donate in exceptional cases.

 

Myth 8: High BP patients cannot be blood donors.

 

Fact: Those with blood pressure between 180 systolic and 100 diastolic can very well donate blood. This frame might be considered high, but it does not isolate you from donating blood. Moreover, blood pressure medicines do not interfere with the process at all.

 

Myth 9: People with seasonal allergies don’t qualify for donating blood.

 

Fact: Seasonal allergies do not interfere with blood donation, just like any other mild cold and cough does not affect your daily routine. So, “I have a cold,” is an absolutely lame excuse for not giving your blood to someone who needs it.

 

Myth 10: Blood donation isn’t for women

 

Fact: No, seriously, how does blood have anything to do with gender? That women bleed every month anyway, so they shouldn’t? The logical argument could be that women have a lower haemoglobin count than men due to their biological setup. Women naturally survive in lower haemoglobin levels. So, blood donation affects them the same way that it would affect a man. Thus, unless women are pregnant, lactating, anaemic, or suffering from some medical issue that lowers haemoglobin count — they can donate blood.

 

Myth 11: A blood donor is prone to infections.

 

Fact: A fresh nee

2018 ONLINE EXAMS: Ghana Nursing Council Conducts Online Mock Examination

In order to offer first-hand experience to candidates who would be writing the Registered Mental Nursing (RMN) licensing examination online, the Council has conducted an online mock exams for 362 RMN candidates.

The examination was conducted simultaneously in three centres across the country namely Pantang, Yendi and Ankaful.



The Deputy Registrar, Mrs. Philomina Woolley accompanied by some Staff of the Council were at the Nurses Training College, Pantang to supervise the conduct of the online mock examination.


According to her, the mock exams was necessary to allow candidates gain the requisite experience and boost their morale to face the main online examination which would be conducted in September this year.

The Stethoscope Does Not Make A Doctor; Attitude Does By Ikechukwu Ogbu

Someone said, “Mental Status Assessment (MSA) should be deployed as a prerequisite criterion before and during clinical practice as a medical doctor in Nigeria.”

The implication of the above admonition is the obvious: there are some good looking, but sick men who are trying to care for the sick. Biblically, it’s sheer stupidity to try removing a fragment of dust from a brother’s eye while one is staggering around with a plank of wood in his eyes. In the philosophy of Nursing, one must be fit before making another fit. Logically, it’s foolishness beaming a red signal for one to act in this conflicting service of virtue.

However, this is not for Doctor Nuwar A M. of the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital, Borno State, Nigeria whose career is an indication of a well clothed man taking bath upon his clothe. For some special advisers and destructive critics who will quickly hit me up in the inbox, please, be informed that any negative act, be it assault or battery meted out on a nurse in public will be treated publicly too. Whether that very nurse is in any amorous relationship with a doctor is never our concern. We become very concerned when ethics and discipline could not be utilised in the treatment of those silly behaviours between lovebirds in private and it begins to dampen or relegate my seraphic profession, Nursing to the background. The fact is that an inimical hand on a nurse, is a dirty slap on our Mother, Florence Nightingale, including NMCN who are very soft in handling some bizarre and blatant nonsensical behaviour.

I’ve seen where some clients laugh mockingly at a young nurse and even student nurses for being scolded by a doctor, publicly. I believe these breeds of nurses are those species who were trained to obey their superiors, even beyond the stethoscopes. They were taught with strictness that obedience was the basic tenet and fundamental desideratum for team work. This teaching got imbued in them that they’re being used as experimental rats to demonstrate agility over fragility. Tufiakwa! This is by the way, anyway!

One of the outstanding qualities of a professional, especially someone working in the corridor of people’s life is neither in the glamorous title that follows his name nor the skills and clinical knowledge accrued from the classroom. It’s rather the wisdom of human relationship and the gentle act of mastering oneself in the titbit of emotional intelligence. Knowledge can take us to a great ladder in life, but only our attitude can sustain us there.

I’m perhaps sounding soft because I want to respect a profession whose (some) members have failed to respect themselves. And this, I must say, is obtainable commonly in Nigeria. As an agent of optimism and positive change, I’ve always called upon our consciousness the urgent need of opening wide doors for men into this noble profession. No doubt, the preys of these predators have always being female nurses. #WeNeedMoreMeninNursing. I commend our ladies who are turning into men in the regard of some serious approach on the ward.

Hardly had Doctor Ajibola pleaded guilty as well as mercy in the jurisdiction and the case adjourned than this handsome idiot began craving for a space in a black book. Currently, he has been suspended by the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital, Borno State where he was wrongly employed. However, this is never enough and can never be enough until the cows come home.

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Meet a Registered Nurse Who Followed Her Dream to Become a Mechanic

Callie Milne was 25 when she quit her career as a nurse and followed her dream.

The Newcastle resident always had a strong interest in cars and was 14 when she first thought about becoming a mechanic.

She bought her first car at 17, a 1978 TC Holden Gemini, and then bought a second Gemini a year later, this time a 1979 TD.

She learnt to drive in the latter and ever since has been working to restore it to its former glory.

Despite an almost decade-long passion for mechanics, Ms Milne began studying a Bachelor of Nursing at the University of Newcastle.

Lacking interest in the course, she struggled during her first-year of study.

The question she never asked herself

Ms Milne said it was never really an option for her to turn her passion for cars into a career.

“Coming to the end of Year 12 through school, everything was always ‘uni, uni, go to university’,” she said.

“I felt like I had to go to university to become something. I never really thought much of an apprenticeship.”
She said the pressure to go to university made her consider engineering, but a lack of confidence in her ability stopped her from applying.

“I was just like, ‘no, I can’t do it, I’m going to struggle’.”

She stuck with nursing and after re-taking the first year of the degree, she passed with distinctions all round.

Ms Milne said she convinced herself it was what she wanted to do, but after graduating and working as a registered nurse, it all fell apart.

After a bad day at work, she came home and broke down to her partner.

“It was the one question I never asked myself, and no one had ever asked me … he said, ‘do you want to be a nurse’?” she said.

“It hit me. And I said no.”

She began applying for heavy vehicle and diesel mechanic apprenticeships and secured a job with Transdev in Sydney.

‘I felt at home’

In Australia, 1.4 per cent of motor mechanics are female, with 89.2 per cent of registered nurses being women.

Ms Milne said this played on her mind, but said she was more confident walking into the industry at 25 than she would have as an 18-year-old.

“Back then, there wasn’t really much talk about women being within the [mechanical] industry, and I was so shy that I felt like I couldn’t take that step into an unknown area where there aren’t really many women.”

Her fears were quashed on her first day in the workshop.

“I walked in, I caught up with my foreman and he gave me an induction.

“He said, ‘right, see that bus over there, I need you to go do this.’

“He just threw me straight in it.

“I think it just made me feel like, ‘hell, I can do this’.
“This is where I want to be and coming out of that first day, working beside tradesmen and learning and getting to be amongst it all, it just felt great.

“I felt at home.”

She said, despite her fears, she had never been treated any differently by her co-workers because of her gender and was always given the opportunity to show off her abilities.

“They give me a shot at everything but it comes down to me being aware of my strength,” she said.

“If I find I can’t lift something or get that extra bit of torque in because my arms won’t let me, my biceps don’t have that muscle, I can just go to one of the tradesmen.

“I think it’s the same with any other apprentice.

“Even when my partner was an apprentice, when he was 16, he couldn’t lift tyres.”

‘Cradle to grave’ change needed
Although Ms Milne followed her passion, the lack of role models around her contributed to her hesitance at a young age.

Workplace Gender Equality Agency director Libby Lyons said most people had never worked in a gender-balanced organisation or industry.

“In Australia today, I can tell you from our data, that six out of 10 Australians work in an industry or an occupation that’s dominated by one gender or the other,” she said.

“So we have these entrenched ideas about the sorts of work that women and men should do.
“It’s about challenging those ideas and challenging the culture that we’ve grown up in, that actually entrenches those ideas in our mind.”

Ms Lyons said it had to start from day one and everyone needed to be a part of the change.

“As parents, as grandparents, as aunts, as uncles, as brothers, as sisters, we have to start talking about women becoming mechanics, becoming train drivers,” she said.

“We have to talk about men becoming nurses, men becoming child carers, men becoming primary school teachers.

“This is cradle to grave stuff.”
Source : http://mobile.abc.net.au/news/2018-07-28/career-change-the-nurse-who-became-a-mechanic/9987148?pfmredir=sm

Nigerian Male Nurses, Student Nurses Relive Stereotype Encounter with Patients

Decked in a sparkling lab coat, Nurudeen Ajani recalled with sadness the event that led him into nursing. He noted that it was a day he hated to recollect, adding that he thought his world had collapsed when the incident occurred.

Ajani, who intermittently dabbed the tears that had formed a ring below his brows, said, “When my mother was to give birth to the third child, she was rushed to the nearest hospital in the neighbourhood. She was in labour pains and needed an urgent medical attention. That was why she was rushed to the nearest hospital.”

He stated that he eventually lost his mother in the process because the medical services she got were below standard.

“If she was attended to by professionals, she might have survived. That was when I decided that I was going to be a nurse,” said Ajani, a 300 level student of the College of Medicine, University of Lagos, Idi-Araba, as tears welled up in his eyes.

Ajani further said he chose nursing over medicine because nurses usually gave the real care to patients.

He added, “I wanted to do something different. Medicine is often believed to be for men while nursing is for women. I wanted to change the trend and that made me choose nursing. They are the ones who administer treatments and have more contact with patients. I chose the course because of my love to serve humanity.”

The student nurse explained that it had been lovely studying among females, stating that sometimes it could be frustrating.

We’ve had our share of stereotypes —Male nurses

Stereotype most times, leading to discrimination, is common for male nursing students. Some student and practising nurses have undoubtedly suffered from it.

Ajani told SUNDAY PUNCH that it had been a bittersweet experience for him though he was optimistic that he would do well as a nurse because it was a career he passionately chose.

He stated, “Some of the challenges I have faced are discouraging comments from people.  Someone once told me that I am studying a course that will later turn me into an errand boy in the hospital when I start practising.  Another person told me that I can’t take decisions on my own even as a professional because I have to wait for doctors before taking any step. Such comments are usually demeaning, but I look beyond all and face my profession squarely.”

Another student, Chinedu Uwandu, who is a year-three nursing student, told our correspondent that he had experienced several cases of stereotyping that made him feel bad. He said however that he had become used to them.

Uwandu stated, “In our early days in the university, especially in 100 level, we always had people say very funny things to us. They make jest of us and all that but now, I think people have come to accept that we now have male nursing students and it is not a profession peculiar to women. Since we were moved to the College of Medicine, all that has stopped.”

For Ayokunnumi Dada, who is a 400-level nursing student, it is the belief of some people outside the department that all the male nursing students, are imbued with same physical strength as females. The nursing student noted that the belief was so rampant that they tended to exclude them from physical inter-departmental activities.

He said, “It was very tough for us as male nursing students in the beginning especially when we were in the main campus. Students from other departments look at our department as ladies’ department. When there are activities at departmental levels where they need men to be involved, we are often sidelined especially because of our number.

“Also, they believe we are like girls and won’t have strength like men. Whenever there are activities involving physical strength, they don’t bother inviting us for such activities.’’

Quoting Dottie Roberts, a nursing instructor at the South University, Columbia, on a health website, Diversity,  he faulted the way males in nursing were referred to as ‘male nurses.’

Roberts contended that since a woman in the profession wasn’t referred to as a ‘female nurse’, using the term ‘male nurse’ implied that the professional was being differentiated from others in the field.

On his part, a nursing student at the Lagos State University College of Medicine, Olawale Badewa, told SUNDAY PUNCH that he had experienced embarrassing moments many times. He said one of the experiences that stuck with him like a leech on its host was the day he was embarrassed by a library attendant.

Badewa told our correspondent, “It was during my 100 level days. The attendant asked me to go back because I looked like a woman in my library card. The attendant was even saying that my course was feminine. I exerted all my energy that day trying to prove that I was a male before I was allowed to use the library. It was really an embarrassing day for me.”

Combating stereotypes, misconceptions

Uwandu told SUNDAY PUNCH that he developed a likeness for the profession because of his mother who is a retired nurse. He explained that as a child, seeing his mother on her uniform and the way she attended to patients cemented his decision to end up as a nurse.

He said, “Also, I like the idea of a male nurse. I like to stand out and that was one of the reasons why I chose nursing. I just love the profession and that is why everything that tends to discourage me has been unable to do so.”

Uwandu told our correspondent that one of the ways he fought stereotypes associated with his profession was by being serious and showing academic prowess.

“It takes a lot of seriousness for five of us to cope in a class of 44 students. Through our performances, we showed them that we are serious and in for a purpose,” recalls the nursing student with delight.

“Our female course mates have come to respect us for that. They don’t see us as being weak or unserious. In fact, most of the time, they prefer that we take decisions on their behalf.

“I don’t feel out of place although our female colleagues can be annoying sometimes. They listen to us more than their co-females. Sometimes when we don’t agree on some things; we try as much as possible to reach a compromise.”

He however noted that generally, their female colleagues were cooperating as they had become free with them and a source of encouragement.

Dada told SUNDAY PUNCH that he didn’t plan to study nursing but had to settle for it after he couldn’t meet up with the cut-off mark for medicine.

Saying he enjoyed the course now that he had seen what it was all about, he added, “It was initially interesting to me, but it’s something I was forced to love. I like the course for its soft side; I believe every course has its soft part. It is the feeling now.”

He stated that he overcame stereotypes in the profession by taking up leadership positions to prove that they were up to the task. According to him, many of his male mates hold one political office or another in the department.

Dada added, “For example, I am the president of the department while my friend is the spokesperson for the school’s student union. I made up my mind that I wouldn’t be looked down on. Although there are many women in the department, I refused to be in the shadow of anyone. I also took up the position of the course representative. The females prefer someone in authority to make the decision for them. I do that often.”

Badewa, who embraced nursing by chance like Dada, said he had come to love the course tremendously.

He also wanted to study medicine but since he was offered nursing as a ‘compensation’ course, he had no choice but to give it his all. “To me, nursing is the profession where I can really communicate with my patients while attending to them,” he stated.

Badewa said confidence had helped him to overcome stereotypes in a class of six males and 17 females. According to him, outside the class, confidence is one element he needs in order for people not to demean him.

He said, “If you like what you’re doing, you will be very confident in it because you know the worth. Most times, when people ask me about what I do? I am always very confident about saying it. I don’t give room for timidity at all.

“I tell them I am studying B.Sc Nursing Science. Whenever they hear that, they give me kudos. But for those who don’t know what it is all about, I do not hesitate to educate them.”

‘Patients mistake us for doctors’

Some of them are also conscious of what awaits them outside the medical college. Dada said though nursing was a lucrative profession, the public viewed it otherwise.

He said, “They see us as quacks and mostly as being in a female profession. I am currently doing my practice at a hospital and the patient will always refer to us as doctors. We often try to correct that notion that we are not doctors and the process of convincing them is often very difficult. In fact, we sometimes fight about it.

“It has a way of affecting our work productivity because it is tiring doing the work of a nurse and someone will be referring to me as a doctor. The person will do that because he or she believes that I should be a doctor and not a nurse because I am a man.”

He said such development could adversely affect them, adding that he might not be able to handle the pressure of practising the profession.

Dada said, “It is one task that I am trying to overcome. In fact, I consider studying medicine.’’

He stated that considering the economic implication of being a nurse, he sometimes wanted to have a rethink.

“Nurses are not often paid for the volume of job they do. They often try to do some side jobs to be able to meet up with financial demands and responsibilities, especially for married men.

“I already have the mentality that we cannot be well paid as male nurses to cater for our family needs; so, I have been looking for what job to do in order to augment things if eventually I practise,” Dada stated.

Also, Badewa also corroborated Dada’s claim that most patients mistook them for doctors.

He stressed that he was scared of practising in Nigeria because nurses were not valued like they were in other countries.

Badewa said, “Also, the private health care system doesn’t employ professional nurses to practise; instead, they employ auxiliary nurses who didn’t go through medical education or field practices.

A practising nurse, Quadri Yakub, said it was initially tough for him when he started working as a nurse. He stated, “Patients referred to me as a doctor. I and my colleagues spent the most part of our day trying to explain that we are nurses and a male can be a nurse.”

‘We are health professionals, not male nurses’

It is known that a large percentage of nurses are females and often, nursing is represented by a female icon which makes the stereotype stronger.

There is even a cheeky sticker for nurses, ‘Nurses are beautiful’, impressively denoting the practitioners as females.

A midwife, Sanni Michael, said he usually got a look and questions relating to why he is a nurse. He stated that over time, he was able to convince his interrogators that nurses were professional medical workers regardless of gender.

Sanni, who also practises as a nurse, told SUNDAY PUNCH, “Whenever I tell people that I am a male nurse, it is often very funny to them. But once I explain the whole idea to them, they are often cool about it.”

On how he attends to female patients especially, Sanni said he always made them feel the need for his services, stating that if anyone snubbed his help, he would take his leave as patients could not be forced to receive care.

Sanni added, “I make them see me as the person who can help them. During my training days, my clinical instructor helped a lot in the past. Whenever they became reluctant, she told them that if the male nurses could not handle it, no one else would. Even when they are reluctant at first, they have no choice but to allow the male nurse attend to them.”

According to him, the situation has helped boost his confidence to the extent that no patient can reject male nurses because the patient only has to decide if she wants medical care or not.

As a midwife, Sanni said labour-room experience was normal for him as a professional, stating that he often didn’t get emotional like his female colleagues.

He said, “I enter the labour room often and so far, there have been no negative reactions from the women. I am a professional and I make them see me from that point of view. We assure them that we are professionals; it is our duty to take care of them.

“Also, there is a notion that male nurses can be flirts. But I deal with a female patient the same way I will deal with a male patient; there is no room for any form of suspicion. We are all professionals and we make them see us as such.”

Yakub said some years after practising, female patients adapted to the idea of male nurses.

For Yakub, the moment he was able to make them realise that there were male nurses, most of his patients especially the females, became comfortable discussing private matters with him.

He said, “After our initial encounters, I discovered that once I win them over, they find it easy to confide in me. In fact, they prefer to talk to me even more than the female nurses. They feel more comfortable with me as a nurse.”

Yakub told SUNDAY PUNCH that he avoided body contact with female patients and ensured there was a female nurse around anytime he was speaking with any of them.

He also faulted claims that health workers were promiscuous, saying people were entitled to their opinion.

The nurse explained that the relationship with his female colleagues didn’t start on a good note at first, but it improved tremendously over time.

Also, Emeka Asagwara, who is a male nurse, said it was fascinating and challenging working as one.

He said, “It is fascinating in the sense that I am always referred to as a doctor by my patients. This is because they can’t imagine a man being a nurse even after I corrected them.”

Asagwara noted that the challenging aspect was from his senior colleagues who were mainly females and wanted him to do their bidding even to his detriment and inconvenience.

“Sometimes the ego thing comes to play at some point. But in the long run, I see patients’ wellness as the goal. I just let it pass,” he said.

Asagwara added that he sometimes found the reactions from female patients as upsetting, so he always avoided the female ward.

“While doing procedures that involve the perineum, I will have to explain what I want to do to them. But if the patient is comfortable with me doing it, I will proceed. But if not, I will just let her be. That does not mean that I am not a professional nurse. I am just respecting the patient’s privacy,” he said.

We avoid body contacts with male nurses –Female patients

A patient in one of the hospitals in Lagos, Esther Adetunji, told SUNDAY PUNCH  that she would only allow a male nurse unknown to her to have physical contact with her especially in cases where injections were to be administered.

She said, “I will do so because if he is someone I know and see often; whenever I see him, I’ll remember the episode. But if I don’t know him, I can be sure we might never meet again. Although I know it is his work but for me, anytime I see him, I’ll be wondering if he is thinking of the episode. Most of the time, whenever I visit the hospital, I usually allow female nurses to attend to me.”

Another patient, Genevieve Ovie, said she wouldn’t mind if a male nurse attended to her provided he had no emotional attachment to her.

She said, “I can allow a male nurse attend to me except if he happens to be someone that has in the past or present, had emotional attachment to me. But if there is an opportunity to choose, I will choose a female nurse. A male nurse has attended to me before but in the presence of a family member.”

Ovie stated that She had no problem with the nurse because She knew he was doing his job, saying She was aware that his qualification made him a nurse and not his gender.

A nurse is a nurse –Lecturer

A lecturer at the Department of Nursing, College of medicine, UNILAG, Mrs. Ogechi Abazie, told SUNDAY PUNCH that there was no difference between a male nurse and a female nurse except the gender.

According to her, all nurses go through the same process of becoming a nurse and they can all carry out procedures.

She said, “A nurse is a nurse. A male nurse is a nurse just like a female; no difference between the two.  Even in school, they are exposed to the same courses and we make them know they are in the right place and they really do well. They are equal in our eyes, no male or female nurses. They are all nurses.

“The major challenge in our society, especially in the North, is because of cultural and religious beliefs, they don’t usually want male nurses to touch their wives and the male also do not like a female nurse attending to them.”

She stated that the best way to tackle the situation was to continually educate the people that saving life was vital than the gender attending to one.

Obazie added, “The only way we can help people is to educate them on the importance of getting themselves treated first before thinking of the gender. Let the person available save you and give you the treatment that you need first. They need to know the importance of saving their life first. If it is an emergency or a person is rushed unconsciously to the hospital, you won’t know who attended to you until you are conscious.

“If it is a male gynaecologist, I don’t think they discriminate against them. I think it’s because people have a mindset that nurses are supposed to be females. This is why we need to continually educate them.”

Source : https://punchng.com/our-bittersweet-tales-with-female-nurses-patients-male-nurses/

Where Are The Nurses In The HIV Response?

Since the beginning of the HIV epidemic, nurses have been at the forefront of the response to this once fatal infection. The nurse is involved at every stage of the trajectory of a person living with HIV—from usually being the first to counsel the newly diagnosed person, to one of the last to be with him/her at the point of death.

This significant, albeit less recognized, role played by nurses across the world in the care, support, and treatment of people living with HIV (PLHIV) was the key theme of an important event hosted by the US based Association of Nurses in AIDS Care (ANAC) at the recently concluded 22nd International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2018) in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

NURSES ARE THE BACKBONE OF EFFECTIVE HIV RESPONSE

Nurses have always been the front and centre of public health crises. In the most recent outbreak of Ebola during May 2018 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the first health professional to die of the infection was a nurse. At the beginning of the HIV epidemic, nurses provided the bulk of in-hospital care during the difficult pre-ART phases, and though there are no recorded incidents of nurses catching HIV in the workplace, there is an associated toll. Nurses can often be stigmatized because of their place of work, and/or work alone in rural clinics with little support and the expectation that they provide all the required care. Nurses also provide point of care HIV tests, support people following a TB test, counsel pregnant young women following a positive HIV diagnosis, and give immediate information about treatment and lifestyle. Indeed, according to Carole Treston, Executive Director of ANAC, nurses are in a prime position to be champions of human rights, “stigma busters and discrimination fighters.”

WHY ARE NURSES ABSENT FROM HIV POLICY MAKING?

Yet nurses are usually absent from policy-making, and even the International AIDS Society has never had a nurse on its board. Nurses do seek influence, not through hubris but rather a desire to shape policy impacting directly on the lives of people affected by HIV. This is something they have in common with civil society organisations, a cohort that since the beginning of the HIV epidemic has become, and rightly so, increasingly vocal and influential. But where are the nurses?

Often, they are simply too busy working at the ground. Then again, in some areas of Africa and South America, for example, nurses are routinely rotated around specialties, working as HIV nurses for only a limited period of time and with little opportunity for career progression in the field. There is also the question of gender, with female nurses less likely to progress in countries where gender inequality is endemic and with hierarchical health systems dominated by male doctors. This is perhaps the reason ANAC and other HIV nursing associations find it difficult to reach out and connect with nurses in eastern Europe and central Asia, where nurses are relatively disempowered compared to the west. Nurses here are unlikely to reach the levels of autonomy required for policy-making involvement and networking.

HEED NURSES’ VOICES FOR EFFECTIVE HIV RESPONSES

The aforesaid event considered a range of options for nurses to be more influential in the HIV response. Shaun Watson, currently chair of the UK’s national HIV nursing association, shared details with CNS (Citizen News Service www.citizen-news.org) of the U=U campaign to which an increasing numbers of nursing groups are signing up to, such as NHIVNA (UK), the European HIV Nursing Network, and the Dutch HIV Nursing Association. For Shaun Watson, “As the people who diagnose HIV, start treatment, monitor adherence, listen to and manage concerns over symptoms and side effects, it will be nurses at the forefront of the U=U campaign. The evidence is clear that the risk of sexually passing on HIV when virally suppressed and engaged in care is zero. This is an important message to get across not only to HIV nurses but to every other nurse.”

Given the dominance of nurses in HIV care, speaking the truth to those in power must be within their remit. Nurses should not be afraid to raise their voices and be heard against the background of an ever-increasing dominance of medicalisation and reliance on data gathering in the HIV response. For Susan Strasser, Senior Implementation Director of ICAP’s global portfolio of public health programmes at Columbia University, the epidemic control of HIV will “only be achieved on the backs and in the hands of nurses.”

By Dr Ian Hodgson, CNS (Citizen News Service)

India: Hospitals Hire School Dropouts,Train Them as Nurses To Cut Costs

“Anyone who has passed their Class 10 board exams is hired by private hospitals, who give them six-month training to become a ‘practical nurse’.”

Nurses have always been in the front line of healthcare. Yet, we have heard of them being exploited, with employers forcing them to work long hours and multiple shifts, and paying them a pittance.
Hospitals in the city are trying to cut corners by employing poorly-paid, unregistered nurses.

They hire people who have passed their Class 10 board exams and train them for around six months. These students are then deemed ‘practical nurses’, or ‘nurse or health assistant’ and do nursing duties at these private establishments. Their training pales in comparison to that given to registered nurses, whose graduation alone takes two to three years.

This practice started after the Supreme Court ordered that registered nurses have to be paid a minimum of `20,000 per month. Private hospitals claim that they cannot afford to pay this salary, and therefore, hire locals who will stay on for longer and can be hired for `4,000-5,000 per month.

Dr Sudha Raddi, principal of KLE Nursing Institute and Medical College, says that the hospital trains 25 ‘practical nurses’ every year. “At least 70 per cent of the nursing staff in the city are unregistered,” she says. Hospitals hire them to save money, she says. “An unregistered nurse with 16 years of experience is paid `16,000,” says Sudha. These nurses also stick around longer since they cannot move abroad without being registered. Whereas, registered nurses stay at a hospital only for two years before moving abroad for better prospects, she says.

Girijamba Devi P, secretary of Trained Nurses Association of India (TNAI), says that hiring of unregistered nurses is unfortunate because it compromises the safety of the patient. “Nurses have no job security anyway, because they are hired as contract employees,” she asks. Girijamba has been a registered nurse for 25 years, and she says that working conditions have not improved till date.

“I had a student who was earning `6,000 per month, and after taxes, she was getting `5,000 in hand. But after her basic expenses, she was left with `1,000 in hand. Even a house maid earns more than this,” says Girijamba.

Shreya Kumar (name changed), a ‘health assistant’ at a top hospital in Bengaluru, was hired two years ago. This job helps her support her family, which is going through a financial crisis. “Even the little I earn goes a long way, and eventually, I may be able to become a registered nurse,” she says. Her colleague Priya Nair also faces a similar situation. However, she plans on shifting to a nursing home because the salary there is better, at `7,000.

Source : http://www.newindianexpress.com/cities/bengaluru/2018/jul/30/hospitals-hire-unregistered-nurses-to-cut-costs-1850347.html