Nurses at Kenyatta National Hospital
(KNH) have downed their tools in solidarity with their counterparts in
county hospitals who have been on strike for 59 days now demanding for
better pay and working conditions.
The nurses serving the largest referral facility in the country had earlier threatened to strike citing work overload.
The
health workers, who are not in dispute with their employer - the
Ministry of Health, say an overwhelming number of patients are flocking
KNH from county facilities, which remain shut due to an ongoing strike.
The over 26,000 nurses employed by county governments across the country went on strike in June, citing a breach of their collective bargaining agreement (CBA) that is yet to be signed and registered in court.
While
the counties said they could not afford the Sh40.3billion annual nurses
demand, the nurses’ union leaders remain adamant saying they will not
renegotiate the earlier agreed deal.
Cholera outbreak
Their
strike comes at a time when the country is experiencing a cholera
outbreak, which the World Health Organisation (WHO) says poses a high
risk to the region and a moderate threat globally.
KNH’s newborn unit is also under immense strain, owing to the ongoing nationwide nurses’ strike.
The
absence of nurses, who tend to newborns in other public health
facilities, has forced the pressure to pile at KNH with 165 babies now
occupying a unit meant to hold at most 40 infants.
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