Nagpur: Close to 20,000 nurses in Maharashtra’s state-run hospitals, including Nagpur, called off their indefinite strike on Wednesday afternoon after the government assured them that it will look into their demands by July 15, said the Maharashtra State Nurses Association (MSNA).
Filling up full-time permanent posts across the GMCs in the state was among the major long-pending demands of the association. A majority of nursing staff from Nagpur’s Government Medical College and Hospital (GMCH) and IGGMCH had joined the state-wide strike, thus crippling the health care services completely.
MSNA has been demanding that the Directorate of Medical Research and Education (DMER) withdraw its decision to outsource recruitment to 1,700 odd vacant posts on contract, which the latter had rejected, calling it a ‘temporary arrangement’.
“We met Medical Education Minister Amit Deshmukh who agreed to look into our demands by July 15. We have decided to resume work. If our demands are not fulfilled by July 15, we will go back and strike,” said Sumitra Tote, Secretary, MSNA.
An official from DMER said Deshmukh has appointed the Dean of Vilasrao Deshmukh Government Medical College and Hospital, Latur, as the nodal officer to look into the demands of the nurses. “We are glad that the nurses have taken back the protest,” said Dr Deelip Mhaisekar, Director, DMER.
The association, which has 25,000 members across the state, went on an indefinite strike from May 28, as student nurses and resident doctors stepped in to manage patient care and emergency services. While the state government had accepted one of their demands to scrap mandatory transfers, outsourcing the recruitment of contractual nurses to an external agency was the major bone of contention.
Since May 25, the nurses have been boycotting work for an hour between 7.30 am and 8.30 am. Later, they went on a two-day strike boycotting emergency services.