Rising levels of aggression directed at nurses and others can only worsen the crisis facing the health service

What a difference a year makes. This time last year, the country had not long ceased its weekly clap for carers. This ritual had its detractors (who thought it sentimental, or that extra pay would be preferable), but it focused attention, and gratefulness, on a cohort who were bearing the brunt of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The pandemic is not over, but earlier this month a survey found that more than a third of doctors have recently experienced verbal abuse and sometimes physical threats. In hospitals, it was most often nurses who were abused, while 96% of GPs had seen it happen to receptionists. Midwives report being physically threatened. Some NHS workers are beginning to hide their badges in public.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Small boat arrivals in Britain likely to rise in 2024, says Border Force officials’ union

Immigration Services Union says recent lull in migrant Channel crossings was due…

Jupiter’s moon Europa may have water where life could exist, say scientists

Surface features similar to ones seen on Greenland ice sheet suggest underground…

Government pulls plug on its remaining UK electric car subsidies

DfT says it wants to focus funding on expanding the public electric…

‘Shock and awe’ interest rate rise leaves Sunak’s cost of living pledge in tatters

Bank raises base rate to 5% and is predicted to go to…