U.S.
nurses to protest, strike over Ebola measures
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[November 12, 2014]
By Curtis Skinner
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Nurses across the
United States will stage protest rallies and strikes on Wednesday over
what they say is insufficient protection for health workers dealing with
patients possibly stricken with the deadly Ebola virus.
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The California-based nurses' union, National Nurses United, says
hospitals still lack enough hazardous materials suits which leave no
skin exposed and sufficient powered air-purifying respirators to
properly protect nurses from exposure.
"Inadequate preparedness for Ebola symbolizes the erosion of patient
care standards generally," National Nurses United spokesman Charles
Idelson said on Tuesday.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it has
ordered $2.7 million worth of personal protective equipment to help
hospitals care for Ebola patients.
National Nurses United expects some 100,000 nurses in more than a
dozen U.S. states, in Washington DC and also in several other
countries including Australia and the Philippines to take part in
the day of action on Wednesday.
Most nurses in the campaign will not walk off the job but will hold
rallies and demonstrations to bring the issue of inadequate Ebola
protection to public attention, Idelson said. Some nurses will hold
a vigil outside the White House.
The Ebola-related protests kicked off in the United States on
Tuesday, when National Nurses United said nearly 20,000 nurses began
a two-day strike in California. Their local union is also locked in
acrimonious contract talks.
The Californian action targeted nearly 90 hospitals and clinics,
mostly operated by Kaiser Permanente, the union said.
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A Kaiser Permanente representative could not be reached for comment
on Tuesday, but the organization has previously accused the union of
using Ebola as a pretext to justify labor action.
The last U.S. patient being treated for Ebola recovered from the
disease on Tuesday.
The Ebola epidemic has killed nearly 5,000 people in West Africa but
only one person, a Liberian native, has died in the United States.
Medical experts say Ebola can be transmitted only through the bodily
fluids of a sick person with symptoms.
(Editing by Gareth Jones)
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