BAHAMAS– Nurses from Ghana to relieve the shortage of nurses

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NASSAU, Bahamas, CMC – Eighteen specialty nurses from Ghana are scheduled to arrive by the end of October to help relieve the shortage of nurses.
NASSAU, Bahamas, CMC – Eighteen specialty nurses from Ghana are scheduled to arrive by the end of October to help relieve the shortage of nurses.

NASSAU, Bahamas, CMC – Eighteen specialty nurses from Ghana are scheduled to arrive by the end of October to help relieve the shortage of nurses.

According to Health Minister Dr Michael Darville, 18 specialty Ghanaian nurses will arrive in the Bahamas to help#

“I would like to see them in the country before the end of the month,” said Health Minister Dr Michael Darville, who was speaking on the sidelines of the Ministry of Health’s Leadership Forum’s opening ceremony on Friday.

“I believe we can accomplish that to fill many gaps of specialty nurses at the Princess Margaret Hospital and some at the Rand Memorial Hospital.

“And to be able to improve the delivery of quality services that we want to provide at our hospitals and take a lot of burdens from a lot of our specialty nurses who are working a lot of overtime, and we don’t want them to burn out. So we look forward to these nurses coming to the country.”

There have been continuing nurse shortages in the country, with many frontline workers continuously complaining of physical and mental exhaustion.

According to Darville, the Ghanaian nurses will help in the fight to provide quality service in the country.

“I want the Bahamian people to know that while we are recruiting, developed countries are recruiting, and it’s a burden that we currently face daily.

“We’re not alone in the Caribbean; other Caribbean colleagues and health ministers are constantly presenting this issue of excessive recruitment in the Caribbean, and the Bahamas is no exception.

“But for us at the Ministry of Health and Wellness, it is our responsibility to do all that we need to ensure that these services are provided in the country, and that requires going outside and recruiting from abroad.

“So, we look forward to the nurses coming from Ghana into the country to help us to deliver quality health care services, not only in Grand Bahama and New Providence but throughout the country.”

Last month, Public Hospital Authority Managing Director Aubynette Rolle said that officials were making various attempts to address the nursing shortage in the country.

She noted that besides Ghana, the government expects nurses from the Philippines and possibly India.

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