Importance Of Salary For Nurses

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Nurses play a very important role in our country and they are also the backbone of our healthcare sector. Nurses are changing lives every day, and for years, they have been going above and beyond putting others needs above theirs. Most people may think that nurses are extremely well paid than teachers and police officers but unfortunately they are not. In fact, they are low paid, burnt out and overworked. It is very important that nurses remain happy and comfortable; therefore, government should see that an increase in salary for nurses is crucial to provide a better healthcare service because they would remain mentally and emotionally stable, be motivated and for sure qualified nurses will migrate from other countries to serve. …show more content…

Increasing nurses salary would greatly influence them to take greater pride in their work; enable them to work harder and even reach for a higher paying position which means that they would that they would upgrade their qualifications. For instance, a registered nurse will ensure he/she work extremely hard to earn the position of the chief of nursing. As a result, the healthcare service will benefit and grow positively towards achieving higher goals. As our motto says “Build and Advance as One People.” Although money is a great motivator, it is not the most important reason why a person ventures into the arena of nursing. They are not in it for the money, but it is the love and passion within them, that give them the desire to care for people. On the other hand, if nurses continue to get the lower pay they will not be motivated to work as effectively as they …show more content…

Those that are qualified would remain because the salary would be attractive: for example, based on online research, “in 2000, over 500 nurses left Ghana for employment in the industrialized countries. That was more than twice the number of new graduates from nursing programs in the country that year (Zachary 2001). In Malawi, between 1999 and 2001 over 60 per cent of the registered nurses in a single tertiary hospital (114 nurses) left for employment in other countries (Martineau et al 2002). In 2003, a hospital in Swaziland reported that 30 per cent of their 125 nurses were lost to work abroad (Kober and Van Damme 2006) and, between 1999 and 2001, Zimbabwe lost 32 per cent of their registered nurses to employment in the UK (Chikanda 2005)” (p. 3).Since these nurses are qualified or specialized they would provide a high-quality service which may be lacking in the hospitals and clinics thus improving health care. Also, the shortage of nurses would be addressed which would result in the nurses being less overworked and stressed. More specialized nurses mean better health care. Doesn’t the populace deserve health care at its

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