Monday, August 19, 2024 -Popular Nigerian doctor on X, Dr Olufunmilayo, has called out the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria (NMcN) for allegedly refusing to verify the licenses of nurses who plan to relocate abroad for greener pastures.
In a post shared on X, Olufunmilayo
said many Nigerian nurses have been trapped in Nigeria against their will as
their professional board have refused to verify their licenses which is a
pre-requisite for them to work outside the shores of Nigeria. He also stated
that some Nigerian nurses abroad who require the board to verify their
certificates are also affected as they suffer job loses because of this alleged
action by the Nursing board.
Describing it as ‘’professional
imprisonment', Olufunmilayo wrote;
‘’I want to raise an alarm about a horrible
injustice being carried out against Nigerian nurses.
Many
of them don’t have the voice, the reach, or the platform for their pain to be
heard or seen so I will gladly do it for them.
The Nursing and Midwifery Council of
Nigeria (NMcN) is refusing indefinitely to verify license for any nurse who
plans and wants to travel abroad.
The license verification is a
mandatory requirement for any nurse who trained in Nigeria to relocate abroad
for work as a nurse.
The decision by the NMCN means:
1. Any licensed nurse who is in Nigeria now
cannot relocate abroad for work. So they can’t move from Nigeria to uk, usa,
Saudi or anywhere else.
2. Any
licensed nurse who trained in Nigeria but already abroad cannot leave where
they are for anywhere else. So they can’t move from uk to usa, Canada or
anywhere. They are stuck where they are.
This
is a form of professional imprisonment and hostage. And it makes zero sense
however you look at it.
Nigerian nurses are overworked, underpaid,
overused, under-appreciated and unfulfilled with their work in Nigeria.
This is why
they want to leave Nigeria.
The
answer to underpaid, overworked and unfulfilled health workers is NOT to hold
them hostage in a system and a country they no longer want to be in. We need to
address the issues, pay them better, make work more fulfilling and build a
country that professionals are happy to live in.
The government is full of lunatic
retards.
There is no other explanation beyond this.
Otherwise, they should know that the only people who suffer this draconian
decision by the NMCN is the patients and populace at hand.
When
you force nurses, or any other professionals, to work against their wishes,
what kind of care do you think the patients will get? Do you want patients to
be treated by nurses who have mentally logged out of the system, who no longer
wish to be in the country and who are being professionally held hostage against
their will?
If this is not clear madness from the
NMCN, then please tell me how else you define and explain insanity.
It’s an absolute disgrace and
distasteful shame that rather than engage the nurses in a productive process
that addresses their concerns and offers them juicy packages that discourages
them from leaving, the NMCN is choosing the shameful path of professional
hostage taking.
Tomorrow, when someone goes to a
general hospital, and they see a nurse who is morose, irritable, upset and
uncaring; you will wonder why. But you will never know that is a healthcare
professional who is forced against her wishes to work in a system she no longer
wants to be part of.
And don’t get me wrong:
I’m not
saying I want all nurses to leave the country. I’m only saying the solution to
the problem of nurses leaving is to specifically address the reasons why.
What
I’m saying very emphatically is that the answer is NOT to simply place a
technical ban on their escape and forcefully make them attend to patients who
will only most likely be the ones to suffer potential half-hearted treatment
from a nurse who is completely fed up of the entire system but has been tied
down and forced to work.
What I’m saying is not a joke.
Canada has confirmed it. Saudi has
confirmed it. Texas/USA has also confirmed it.
Today it is
the nurses being held hostage. It could be doctors tomorrow. Or dentists. Or
pharmacists. Or dietitians. Or opticians. Or optometrists. Or engineers. Or
physiotherapists.
It could literally be anybody. It could be you. Please kindly lend your voice. Please let’s speak up for these nurses.''
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