Hospitals are getting full almost every day and it leads to one in, one out situation where we have to choose between different patients that all need hospital care. In France nobody applies to hospital jobs anymore because those jobs aren't attractive at all. Salaries are low compared to other places and working conditions are deteriorating a lot. So these days to provide our care services we're always in a rush. It's care that we do back to back and not well. And here's a nurse in France who's talking about what work these days is like for her. She says: "We barely have time to sit down"
Europe’s universal healthcare systems have long been held up as models for other parts of the world. But in many countries they are now under extreme strain. Chronic underfunding, an aging population and labor force, and continuing fallout from the pandemic mean these systems are sometimes failing their patients.
Bloomberg reporters Naomi Kresge and Jonas Ekblom join this episode to explain how this happened and what governments are trying to do about it. And Dr. Tomas Zapata of the World Health Organization talks about how European nations can rebuild the healthcare workforce before it deteriorates.
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