April 28, 2025

Harmony Thrive

Superior Health, Meaningful Life

New Zealand nurses union promotes racial divisions

New Zealand nurses union promotes racial divisions

The New Zealand Nurses Organisation (NZNO) recently released a report calling for an increased proportion of Māori nurses, implying that non-Māori and migrants who work in the healthcare system are culturally insensitive or racist, and generally incapable of working with Māori patients.

Kerri Nuku [Photo: New Zealand Nurses Organisation]

The 30-page document released on February 6, titled “Kaupapa Māori Culturally Safe Staffing Ratios: Māori nursing leaders’ perspectives,” was written by the NZNO’s kaiwhakahaere (Māori co-president) Kerri Nuku, in collaboration with Heather Came, an “anti-racism scholar” from Victoria University of Wellington.

It was released amid a deepening assault by the far-right National Party-led government on the public health system, aimed at cutting billions of dollars. Thousands of “back office” workers are being sacked and hospitals around the country have imposed an unofficial hiring freeze, even as emergency departments are regularly overwhelmed with patients.

Last December, more than 30,000 NZNO members joined two part-day strikes in opposition to a proposed pay rise of just 1.5 percent over two years—well below the increased cost of living. Since then, the NZNO has remained silent about its ongoing negotiations with the government’s Health NZ agency.

Bitter disputes in 2018 and 2021, during the last Labour Party-led government, were sold out by the NZNO bureaucracy, in which Nuku played a leading role. Strikes were repeatedly cancelled and the union promoted agreements that did nothing to meaningfully improve pay or resolve the staffing crisis in hospitals.

As well as decent pay, nurses have for years been demanding mandated staff-to-patient ratios in hospital wards. In Queensland, Australia, for example, hospitals have a legislated staffing requirement of one nurse to every four patients—although Australia faces its own staffing crisis and ratios are not always adhered to. There is no similar requirement in New Zealand.

The NZNO’s report on “culturally safe staffing ratios,” while acknowledging the deep crisis of understaffing, advances a new definition of “safe staffing” that is aimed at pitting workers of different races and nationalities against each other in a fight over dwindling job opportunities. The report is an object lesson in how identity politics, based on race and gender, is used by the pro-capitalist union leadership in order to derail any unified fight by workers for well-staffed hospitals with highly-paid, secure jobs, providing care to all who need it.

“This [briefing paper] is about us turning ratios on their Eurocentric head, setting the gold standard around cultural responsiveness to Māori and embedding cultural safety into all conversations about staffing levels,” Nuku declares in the foreword.

What does this mean concretely? The document calls for an increase in the proportion of Māori nurses—who are currently about 7 percent of the workforce—to match the level of Māori in the population (about 17 percent), based on the reactionary and false premise that only Māori nurses are capable of working with Māori patients in a “culturally safe” way.

link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Copyright © All rights reserved. | Newsphere by AF themes.