PNG nurses say health care system failing

ABC



Papua New Guinea's nurses say the country's health system is failing

to attend to basic patient needs.

These concerns have been raised as PNG hosts a week long nurses

symposium to discuss the various pressures on the country's healthcare

sector.

PNG Nurses Association President Emi Kaptigau told the situation seems dire.

"We're encountering so many problems, I don't know how we're going to

address them," she said.

She says PNG's health care system is understaffed and under-equipped

to such a degree it can't treat patients properly.

"The basic services of attending to patients as they come and go,

there is lack of manpower and there is lack of supplies, medical

supplies, drugs, equipment and this has affected us so much that we

are not able to effectively meet the need of the people," she said.

"It's just too much for us to bear at this point in time."

Ms Kaptigau says the best nurses in the government system have left

for the private sector and overseas because of the poor working and

pay conditions.

"The pay that we are getting is good enough to survive but because of

the livings standards that is so high the pay is gone by the time we

get it so the next week or two we're living on borrowed money," she

said.

She says the nurses have petitioned PNG's secretary for health about

their concerns.

"He's reassured us that he'll look into it but we need to do a proper

paper for him to present to the O'Neill government," she says.

Last Thursday, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, also

raised concerns about PNG's healthcare system, saying it needed

"urgent attention".