EuroNews (English)

Doctor shortages, low pay and overtime: Europe's hospitals are under the weather

- Amandine Hess

Hospitals across Europe appear to be on life support.

Whether it's in France, Slovenia or Sweden, hospitals are facing staff shortages, lower wages and increasing levels of overtime, prompting industrial action across the healthcare sector which inevitably impacts patient care. In Sweden, healthcare workers went on strike for the first time in 16 years to protest against their working hours and low pay over 78 consecutiv­e days in 2024.

It's less common to see strikes in the Nordic countries than in other parts of Europe, yet after four months of collective bargaining negotiatio­ns, the Swedish Associatio­n of Health Profession­als' hand was forced, and it went on strike from 11 April to 28 June.

"We met a dead end in the negotiatio­ns," said Sineva Ribeiro, president of the Swedish Associatio­n of Health Profession­als, a trade union with a membership of 114,000 representi­ng nurses, midwives, biomedical scientists and radiograph­ers. "We had to go on strike. We had to have a conflict.” The trade union also issued an overtime ban. "In 2023, they [members of the associatio­n] did three million overtime hours," Ribeiro said. "So we knew that there was a lack of nurses, midwives, radiograph­s and X-ray nurses."

In the end, the Swedish Associatio­n of Health Profession­als managed to obtain reduced working hours for 10% of its members - those who work night shifts - a 3.05% salary increase and an agreement that employers pay for nurse specialisa­tions.

On the flipside, they agreed to abandon calls to reduce medical staff's weekly working hours from 40 to 37.

More generally, deteriorat­ing working conditions are said to be one of the main factors forcing health workers out of Sweden and into neighbouri­ng countries.

"We have about 20,000 nurses working in Norway because they pay more and they have less hours a week", Ribeiro said.

In addition, 13,000 qualified nurses have left the profession, leaving a taxpayer-funded black hole of more than €60 million, according to a report by the Swedish National Health Competence Council published in June.

"It is better [in Sweden] maybe than other EU countries," said Ribeiro. "But we still have a big lack of nurses who may treat the health of the population. And we never know when the next pandemic can come."

'A ticking time bomb'

But the reality is that there's a similar problem across the EU. Public hospitals in countries around the bloc are confronted with parallel challenges, including an ageing population who will need more healthcare and difficulty in replacing healthcare workers who retire because the profession is not as attractive as it used to be.

"There is an increase of demand, basically because of four main factors the aging of the population, the increase of multimorbi­dity and chronic conditions, the backlogs accumulate­d during the COVID-19 pandemic in terms of waiting list, and also because of increased expectatio­ns of patients", explained Tomas Zapata, regional advisor on health workforce and service delivery at the World

Health Organizati­on (WHO) Europe. He told Euronews that European countries' health sectors are facing a "workforce crisis", highlighte­d by the strikes by different types of healthcare profession­als.

"We have more doctors and nurses than ever. So in the last 10 years, there has been a 20% increase of doctors in the whole region and a 10% increase in the number of nurses. However, the demand is growing at a faster pace. So that means that we are having this shortage, this gap between the demand and the availabili­ty of health workers", he said.

A regional report published by the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) Europe in September 2022 warned of a "ticking timebomb" threatenin­g health systems in

Europe and Central Asia.

It said that one of the main challenges is the ageing health and care workforce, noting that 40% of doctors in 13 of the 44 countries it looked at are already aged 55 or older.

The report also highlights poor mental health among those in the medical profession affected by long working hours, inadequate profession­al support, and serious staff shortages.

In some countries, over 80% of nurses reported some form of psychologi­cal distress caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. As many as nine out of 10 nurses were thinking of quitting their jobs, according to the report.

All of these issues are forcing doctors and other healthcare workers across Europe into strikes, in an effort for better working conditions.

Germany demands 'top-notch' care

In January, thousands of doctors at state-owned university hospitals in Germany staged a strike after collective bargaining talks with hospital managers failed.

Some 5,000 doctors joined a "warning strike", organised by the Marburger Bund in the northern city of Hanover, the trade union said.

It demanded a 12.5% pay rise and higher bonuses for working nights, weekends and public holidays for 20,000 doctors in university hospitals.

They took to the streets again in March after the fourth round of negotiatio­ns with the 16 federal states (Länder) which run public hospitals, ended in failure. According to the Marburger Bund, approximat­ely 7,000 doctors from 23 institutio­ns across Germany took part in various demonstrat­ions this time around. "We cannot accept that university medicine remains the last wheel of the wagon in terms of doctors' salaries", Andreas Botzlar, second chairman of the Marburger Bund, said in a statement.

"The recent round of negotiatio­ns has left us with the impression that the Länder still do not understand what it is all about: we are demanding fair conditions for topnotch medicine. Not more - but also not less," he added.

Slovenia sees longest-ever doctors' strike

Doctors and dentists working in the Slovenian public healthcare service went on strike in January, in what has become the country's longest-ever doctors' strike.

They withdrew their consent for overtime work in a bid t o pressure the government into honouring its commitment­s to a previously tabled health reform and bringing it back to the negotiatin­g table. In 2023, Fides, the doctors and dentists trade union, signed an agreement with the government to create a separate pay pillar in the public sector payscale for healthcare profession­als, but this never came to fruition.

"Employees are leaving public institutio­ns, and good paediatric­ians are being penalised for their willingnes­s to help the public sector," Damjan Polh, Fides president, said in a statement. "Promises about reforms remain unfulfille­d, and laws in the field of healthcare are written by those who do not understand it at all." The government adopted a proposal to amend the Medical Services Act, which would establish a minimum working time requiremen­t during a strike "to guarantee the stable operation of the healthcare system".

Fides has appealed to Slovenia's Constituti­onal Court to question such a measure's constituti­onality and legality. According to the union, it would "further restrict the right of doctors to strike".

Most recently, the trade union informed the Slovenian government in August of additional strike demands to protect the medical profession.

Controvers­ial reform in France

Over in France, a measure of a different kind has sparked outrage among medical students: there will be 1,510 fewer openings for junior doctors this autumn.

Only 7,974 positions will have been opened this year, compared to 9,484 in 2023, according to official government data from July. In France, junior doctors, or

 ?? ?? Healthcare workers protested in France, Germany, Slovenia and Sweden over the past months.
Healthcare workers protested in France, Germany, Slovenia and Sweden over the past months.
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