NYS fires over 30k+ healthcare workers with no severance benefits only to offer $10k sign on bonuses for travel nurses and bring in National Guards to fill nursing and admin positions. THEN you start offering $3-8k hiring bonuses...and now this? NYS is beyond retarded.
(media.greatawakening.win)
⚠️ Vax-TYRANNY ☠️
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Do NG have nursing licenses in the state? Or are they trained to take xrays and CT scans? How about putting in IVs, record keeping?
When NG called in my home town (when 84 seniors died in 2 weeks under orders of Levine and Wolf), all the NG could do was mop the floors and wipe down beds and night stands.
Around here they basically pushed carts and provided security. They replaced fired cafeteria runners, the people moving sheets, and the trash crew. The "smarter" ones took a crash course to get a CNA license over a couple of weeks. That qualified them to change bed pans, wipe butts, give sponge baths and observe the crazies.
Yes, I can't confirm this but based on rumors some of ours were given basically weekend courses for CNA/LPN certs and even then they weren't the typical courses or hours. I heard in california they are doing the same thing for teaching credentials because they are so short on teachers (yet another corrupt field and state).
We have a program in Texas called Temporary Nurse Aid. The nursing homes get paid more fed dollars if the staff is certified. So an experienced worker can view 8 hrs of online instruction, then test for CNA. It's a total failure. Even if the worker is the best worker in the facility, they cannot learn to take the test in 8 hrs. I wish they would do away with that program, but .... cannot give up those federal bux.
I have no idea who the NGs were specifically or if they had licenses. I wouldn't be surprised either if the loosened whatever requirements they need for licensure to fill in the spots either.
Hm I wonder too. Again - here in Texas, at the beginning of the pandemic, Graduate Nurses were allowed to work as RNs, with supervision. While they were waiting to test. To me, that sounds like a lot of stress for the supervising RN. Like having an orientee every day. It didn't effect me but I know a lot of my friends didn't like it AT ALL. Because, at the end of the day, it's the license that's responsible.