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Health Minister salutes nurses on World Nursing Day

To honour of all the brave nurses in the country who are deemed as essential workers during the lockdown, Minister Dr Zweli Mkhize recalled iconic nurses on World Nursing Day. He said that nurses are the face of healthcare in South Africa and called upon them to emulate Florence Nightingale and Cecilia Makiwane, who were the country’s first registered black nurse in 1908.

Whilst addressing the health workers at Durban’s King Edward V Hospital, Mkhize reminded us that Nightingale tended to sick and fallen soldiers during the Crimean War, while the Alice-born Makiwane gave up her job in the teaching profession to answer her nursing calling.

“An early activist for women’s rights and in the anti-pass movement, Makiwane is remembered for her indomitable spirit and her unwavering dedication and commitment to the craft. Today, Makiwane’s memory reminds us of our strong legacy of black excellence in the profession which we must continue to advance in everything that we do,” said Mkhize.

The minister said nurses played an important role in protecting and caring for communities. He also paid tribute to 20 nurses who went to help in Tanzania in 1961, when British rule ended in the East African country. “Two of these nurses are from this province of KwaZulu Natal, the late Edna Miya who worked at King George, and Sister Cecelia Ntombenhle Khuzwayo, who is now 83, and worked at King Edward. “We salute you for being ready to serve the diaspora,” said Mkhize.

Mkhize said in a bid to prevent the looming crisis of a shortage of nurses, Treasury had approved the filing of posts in all nine provinces, during and after the Covid-19 pandemic. He also added that the government was committed to equipping health workers with the necessary protective equipment.

“As we celebrate our nurses and midwives, I would like to affirm our commitment to ensuring that no nurse will be allowed to care for patients without appropriate protective equipment, be it at community level during screening and testing or in a health facility,” concludes Mkhize.

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