Todays Nightingales

Todays Nightingales

2 mins read119 Views Comment
Updated on Sep 25, 2009 05:27 IST

Deepa Jagannathan, 27, is a nurse working in the cardiac care unit of the Delhi Heart and Lung Institute. She chose this career because she “always wanted to take care of people and this is a noble profession”.


Jagannathan earned Rs 4,500 in the first month when she joined the profession in 2004 after doing BSc in nursing. She went on to do a PG diploma course in clinical research and is earning  Rs 10,000 at present.


She has a dream. Like her sister, who works as a nurse in Ireland, she wants to go abroad, to “meet new people, visit new places, handle new instruments and earn more money”. And with the growing need for well-trained nurses in the UK, her dream could be fulfilled soon.


Hers is not an isolated case. Experienced nurses like Jagannathan are flying out of the country, adding to the shortage of good nurses here. R Sapra, principal, School of Nursing, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, says, “The moment they gain some experience, they migrate to countries like the US, England, Ireland and Saudi Arabia. Or even Singapore. This definitely creates a shortage. In Europe, the nurse-population ratio is 1:150; in India, it is 1:2250.”


“It is the lure of money,” says Jaya Kumari, nursing superintendent, Dr Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital. “Despite the revised salary structure in the Sixth Pay Commission, nurses want more. The opportunity to work with newer technology and the scope of further studies tilt the balance in favour of foreign countries.”


Poor training adds to the lack of qualified nurses in the country. “In the metros, the quality of training is up to the mark,” says Sapra. However, aspiring nurses should thoroughly check institutes in smaller cities as “most lack proper infrastructure and clinical experience.” “Their sub-standard education produces under-qualified nurses,” she adds.


Nursing, usually a woman’s domain in India, is attracting men as well. “Though none of the Delhi institutes are taking male students, Karnataka and Rajasthan have quite a number of them,” says Sapra


Men are doing well in  male wards, OTs, OPDs, orthopaedic care, casualty and emergency wards, but overall, women seem to be better suited to the job. “Men are welcome, but are not as well accepted as female nurses,” says Grace Saxena, nursing superintendent, Delhi Heart and Lung Institute. This is one gender barrier waiting to be breached.

 

Author: Pranab Ghosh

Date: 16th Sep., 2009


For related course to B. Sc. Nursing please click on the below link:

Related course and colleges

About the Author

This account contains a repository of informative articles by external authors with domain expertise in various aspects of guiding students on how to go about pursuing their undergraduate and postgraduate studies in... Read Full Bio