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Australian nurses strike over staff shortages, pay conditions

Nurses gathered in front of the state parliament building in Sydney
Nurses gathered in front of the state parliament building in Sydney

Thousands of nurses in Australia's most populous state walked off the job for the first time in nearly a decade to begin a 24-hour strike after talks with the government to plug staff shortages and secure a pay rise failed.

Nurses and midwives across New South Wales (NSW) defied a last minute order by the state's industrial relations commission to call off the strike, which it said could put public health in danger.

Nurses gathered in front of the state parliament building in Sydney, holding placards saying "Fatigued, exhausted, worn out and burnt out", "Need more nurses now" and "Stop telling us to cope."

Nurses had sought a pay rise of more than 2.5% and better nurse-to-patient ratios. The strike will be staggered through the day and will include staff from more than 150 hospitals around the state.

"The community needs to hear the truth - current staffing levels are inadequate, unsafe and putting patients at risk," said the New South Wales Nurses and Midwives' Association.

NSW Health Minister Brad Hazzard said it was "unfortunate" and "disappointing" that nurses persisted with the strike.

He told radio station 2GB that the government was working on a solution but said some suggested changes to nurse-patient ratios could cost "a billion dollars".

The arrival of the fast-moving Omicron variant in Australia in late November fuelled a surge in Covid-19 infections - accounting for the bulk of the country's total of around 2.6 million confirmed cases - and overwhelmed hospitals.

New case numbers have been trending lower in recent days.

Just over 23,000 new cases were reported by midday today, while hospital cases dipped to about 3,000 from a peak of 5,400 three weeks ago.

Officials registered 46 new deaths, with the pandemic total standing at 4,664.


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In a statement, the New South Wales Health Department thanked nurses for working "tirelessly during the two years of the Covid-19 pandemic."

But, it added, "there are more nurses and midwives in New South Wales public hospitals than at any other time in history."