Originally Posted by classicdame
Sad day for Texas nurses. Who are you kidding? Unions don't do anything well except collect dues.
Nurses all across the country, and especially those at CyFair Texas are joyfully celebrating a hard fought, well deserved victory.
Historically, what we're experiencing is a "back to the future" time of liberation for women, nurses, and patients from the oppressive, abusive, and destructive restructuring of health care from a social service to a market-based commodity.
The Texas/NNOC nurses have long recognized that one of the principal barriers to patient advocacy is that corporations put profits ahead of safe patient care. Hospitals cut nurses, or try to eliminate them with expensive technologies, or discharge medically fragile patients who need professional nursing care to fend for themselves when the length of stay threatens profit margins.
The physical work is exhausting and demanding; intellectual, artistic, experienced, professional nursing labor is being devalued. Working conditions such as mandatory overtime causes preventable errors and patients suffer as a result. We have a duty to change those conditions that are barriers to our abillity to advocate in the exclusive interests of our patients and our profession!
Nurse Lavinia Dock and others spoke out and demonstrated for women's rights. Dock was also a militant suffragist and actively worked to bring nurses into the trade union movement, and she fought for the abolition of the double standard of morality. They did not have the right to vote, but they were organizing for change.
Through our union, we have a say, a vote, (if you will), in our working conditions. We're organizing for change to make hospitals, and ultimately health care, safer for patients. To that end, we are organizing and advocating for a fair and equitable system of healthcare, single-payer, guaranteed healthcare for all. A system that ensures that patients will be provided with the medical and nursing care they need when they are sick or injured.
We will collectively continue to fight for equality and better wages, hours, ratios, and working conditions, so that we can insure that there will be enough nurses to safely, effectively, and therapeutically care for patients. That's a life we can all be proud to hang our hats on