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Talks Break Down – Nurses Strike Begins in Israel


While there was hope last-minute talks would avert the strike, the talks broke down during the night and nurses in Israel walked off the job on Tuesday, beginning a nationwide strike to protest their working conditions and salaries.

The strike impacts hospitals around Israel, as well as kupot cholim (HMOs) and Health Ministry offices. Hospitals will operate on an emergency status, with minimum nursing staff.

After days of threatening, on Tuesday morning, July 23, 2019, at 7:00AM, the nurses announced the strike, impacting hospitals, kupot cholim and health ministry offices around the country. The Ministry of Health plans to turn to the labor court seeking a back-to-work order for the striking nurses.

Being on emergency status, all non-emergency surgical procedures are cancelled, as is the case with many out-patient procedures that were scheduled. Minimal teams will staff intensive care units, as is the case with dialysis, oncology, fertility units. Geriatric and psychiatric hospitals will operate on a limited format as well. In all hospitals, an emergency nursing staff will be set up as well as an exceptions committee to determine where and when the striking nurses may operate.

The Ministry of Health will provide emergency services only during the strike, such as addressing cases of rabies, meningitis or the outbreak of an illness. There will be no vaccinations for trips abroad, blood tests or other related services during the strike.

The nurses are protesting the intended cut in their wages as well as demanding additional staff be hired, to removal of beds from corridors because of the heavy burden on the hospitals then eventually, falls on them, the nursing staff.

The anger of the nurses also arose due to the reexamination of the accreditations that they claimed led to the burden of additional work and procedures, all falling on them. The accreditation test is a serious of tests conducted by the JCI (Joint Commission International) every three years. In light of the decision of the Ministry of Health, a hospital’s operations permit relies on the this test, and to pass it, the nurses claim, the management asks them to misrepresent the situation and meet unrealistic standards of professionalism and cleanliness when they claim there is not enough to manpower to meet the level desired.

The head of the nurses’ union, Ilana Cohen said, “The nurses in Israel cry out to the cry of the citizens of Israel, who are lying humiliated in the corridors under sub-conditions, with parents and children waiting desperately on endless lines and babies who do not receive vaccinations on time. The nurses in Israel request a true and immediate solution to enable them to provide proper and safe treatment to the citizens of Israel. No more committees, no more so-called solutions that have provided nothing over the years.

“The nurses will no longer lend a hand to working beyond the standards and license, to community and public health tasks, to procedures and controls without additional personnel and without a salary increase. The Ministries of Health and Finance are directly responsible for the severe overcrowding in hospitals and the corridors continue to remain full of patients and beds”.

The Health Ministry states that officials met with nursing representatives and many constructive suggestions were made to avoid the strike which will lead to harm to the patients.

(YWN Israel Desk – Jerusalem)



3 Responses

  1. It sounds cruel, but the nurses are right. The situation in Israeli hospital is appalling and I don’t believe that any of the suggestion offered them in the middle of the night are comprehensive enough solution to ease the overcrowding both in the wards and the ER. Having the zechus to be a member of the sandwich generation in which capacity I’ve spent hours and days in the ER with my elderly mother זאל זי זיין געזונט און שטארק and other family members, I can only say that if this strike will improve the situation by even just 10%, it will be well worth it. No one looks at you for hours and I’m not talking about only broken bones but also suspected cardiovascular issues and more. So if these brave nurses are not willing to comply with false reports that present a picture of normalcy, but rather insist on telling it like it is, then they deserve our support and not our condemnations. Even if their intentions might not be 100% lesheim shomayim i.e. not only for the patients’ benefit, but also to prevent verbal abuse and/or physical violence perteptrated against them by frustrated patients and their families, they still have a true grievance that they are trying to correct. One must get to the bottom of the problem. Is it because the Ministry of Finance is not allocating enough funds to the Ministry of Health? Or is it the Ministry of Health that is not appropriating enough funds for hospitals? Or is is the hospitals’ aministration that is not spending the allocations wisely? Transparency of the entire chain is necessary to research the problem and find real solutions. If money is not being misspent, but just plain lacking, maybe megedonors can give grants for a special fund including watchdogs to oversee how the funds are allocated.

  2. This situation did not happen overnight. Our government has proven useless in maintaining a functioning society. Intervention and “constructive suggestions” are too late on the night before a long-developing strike. Who will take responsibility? Who will prevent the collapse of our health care system? Is health care a business that can close? Seems that in Israel it can happen, unfortunately.

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