#NightingaleMustFall: Nurses declare war on white

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Nurses have called for the outright rejection of the white uniform synonymous with the profession for decades.

According to the nurses, the uniform was “a product of apartheid and held back transformation”.

The white uniform was originally designed for Florence Nightingale’s school of nursing and signified hygiene and cleanliness, standing as the beacon of hope in a world overburdened by disease.

But pressure group and nurses’ association Young Nurses Indaba declared this week #NightingaleMustFall.

The organisation is made up of nurses from all unions, political parties and formations, in public and private practices.

“The idea that nurses must wear pristine white and work under any conditions was borne of the attitude Nightingale had to nursing,” said a founder member of the association, Lebogang Phehla.

He said Nightingale gave the impression that nurses did not need good working conditions. “Her work ethic robbed us of the professional courtesy we demand from our bosses.”

During the apartheid era, the uniform had been used to enforce segregation and poor living and working conditions, Phehla said.

“It is holding us back from transforming the profession; the government is not working with us to improve the health of the country. We will therefore enforce the change.”

The nurses will gather in Pretoria on Monday to march on Health Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi’s office and then the Nursing Council.

They will wear black and demand better pay and working conditions, and remind elected public representatives of their “plight and suffering” from outside the confines of bargaining structures.

Source: Pretoria News

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