You are accessing this site in a read-only mode. For full access to all member benefits, including message posting, please login or register. Registration is completely free, simple, and takes only a few seconds.
The message you are replying to and its parents are listed in the reverse order with the most recent posts first. This might not be the whole discussion thread. To read all the messages in this thread please click here.
Re: Too much government in healthcare professions
| JEDilworth | 16 Aug 2005 15:39 |
So, what exactly is your profession? What are you being asked to do by the government? Has your state of residence recently become a licensure state and you don't have the qualifications to complete licensure requirements?
It sounds as if your profession is requiring a college degree or equivalent, and you don't have one. It also sounds as if you are dissatisfied with your employer. You seem fixated on government causing all of your problems instead of possible lack of initiative on your own part. It's easy to blame the "gumment" for lots of things.
I have a great employer and have no complaints. No profession is perfect. For me to start over now would require a big investment in school and probably a pay cut. I would expect it would be the same for you.
Why don't you lay the cards on the table in your posting, instead of writing a "black helicopter anti-government rant" and perhaps you will get some empathy? What's REALLY going on here?
Judy Dilworth, M.T. (ASCP) Microbiology
> I happen to be one of those other health > professionals. And I too will probably leave my [quoted text clipped - 4 lines] > like the unreasonable government interference in my > work and in my life. |
| nickzelinski@hotmail.com | 16 Aug 2005 13:52 |
It's a well known fact that nurses are leaving their profession in droves. And they are leaving it in such numbers that the new nurses coming out of shools are not enough to replace them.
Job dissatisfaction is perhaps higher in nursing than in other health professions. But other health professions also have a problem with people leaving well before their retirement age.
I happen to be one of those other health professionals. And I too will probably leave my profession soon.
It's not only poor working conditions and lack of control over my work that upsets me. I also don't like the unreasonable government interference in my work and in my life.
Local governments in most places have recently created many new rules and regulations that govern health professionals. And now I find myself in a ridiculous situation where my many years of work-experience and continuing self-education count for nothing. According to these new government regulations, I'm now actually less qualified to do my work than the new graduates who have no work-experience.
I suppose this is what happens when some bureaucrats in a far away place take it on themselves to judge who is competent to do his or her work and who is not.
I have more than kept up with the advances my profession through continuing self-education. Whenever I come accross something I'm not familiar with in my work, then I go on the internet and find out about it in much greater detail than is really necessary for me to do my work. And what I learn this way actually stays in my head. The information has real meaning for me because it is relevant to my everyday work.
But the new government rules and regulations completely ignore this kind of learning. And they penalize people like me.
According to my local government, I'm now not qualified to do my work because I've not taken enough formal courses and I've not memorized a bunch of facts most of which have little to do with my everyday work.
I can accept that the government and employers have an interest in making sure that health professionals are competent in their work. And would have no problem, if periodically I had to write an exam to assess my knowledge. And if I fail the exam, then I can accept that I need to take a course or two to upgrade my knowledge.
But I do have a problem when the government tells me that I'm not qualified to do my work, despite the fact that my supervisors praise me for my competence and the good quality of my work and I have not failed any exams.
I've recently looked up the internet site of the organization created by my local government for regulating and registering people in my profession. And what I've read there really turned me off.
This internet site reminds the reader that their organization has been created by government legislation to regulate workers like me. They have the authority to do it. And what's more, practicing in my profession is a "priveledge", not a right.
In other words, 'Workers like me have to do as they say, or else'.
Well, I don't need this kind of bulshit from the government. There are many other professions where the pay and the working conditions are better. And there are many other professions where employers recognize and value the competence and the years of work experience of their employees.
I don't need some far away government bureaucrat whom I've never met telling me that I'm not competent, when both I and my employer know that I am competent.
I will leave my profession. And my only regret is that I chose to go into this profession in the first place. If I had known that the government will start interfering in my work and in my life this way, then I would have chosen some other profession.
|
Quick links: