Denosa Student Movement Limpopo

Denosa Student Movement Limpopo EXTERNAL MISSION
DENOSA - an empowered nursing cadre, serving, caring and advocating

VISION
Nurses united in pursuing service excellence

INTERNAL MISSION
DENOSA supports, represents and develops its members as the backbone of South African health care.

17/07/2021

Happy international nurses day worldwide.
12/05/2021

Happy international nurses day worldwide.

23/02/2021
25/10/2020

DENOSA National Student Movement NEC underway at Manhattan's hotel in Pretoria.
2nd day.

07/10/2020
04/07/2020

DENOSA STUDENT MOVEMENT
LIMPOPO PROVINCE.
MEDIA STATEMENT.
03 July 2020

Denosa student Movement Limpopo on the reopening of the Limpopo college nursing.

Denosa student Movement Limpopo welcomes the reopening of the Limpopo college of nursing to operate under strict COVID-19 regulations. It is in this era that the country and the province are in need of Health professionals. Reopening of the college will assist in the production of more Nurses who are need most in a fighting against this pandemic.

We urge all students to adhere to lockdown regulations which includes social distancing, wash of hands regularly with clean water and soup or sanitation and wear a facemask .

Refrain from situations which can expose them to the virus.

We call upon the Department of Health to provide Personal protective equipment (PPE’s) to students and adhere to the lockdown regulations when they provide training.

Students should never be allowed to attend to COVID-19 cases without supervision.

We welcome extension of programme as remedy to save this academic year to ensure that students get sufficient and quality training that will enable them provide nursing care.

*We call on the Department of Health to continue funding students even beyond the contractual agreement, because program extension is as a results of natural disaster.*

We condemn in the strongest term possible, the inequality and the persistent abuse of students by the Department of health perpetuated by bursary system as a funding model. Throughout this pandemic, only students on persal system received their stipend will students on bursary system were neglected and left to starve during lockdown. We also note that students received paucity allowances, worse amount are not consistent amongst the campuses.

We demand that all the students on bursary system be paid what is due to them and to be backdate from March 2020.

Book allowance must be paid to this students enable them to fulfil their academic commitments.

END
Issued by Denosa students Movement Limpopo

For more information, contact
Rebotile Maphothoma
Provincial Chairperson
082 955 8010

16/06/2020

Media statement

Tuesday, 16 June 2020

DENOSA National Student Movement statement on Youth Day

As June 16 marks Youth Day in South Africa in commemoration of the 1976 Soweto Uprising, the DENOSA National Student Movement would like to reflect on and highlight the need to address the issue of the increasingly limited access to nursing education in the country and the rising Youth Unemployment with almost no solution to these challenges.

Since the introduction of a bursary system into the nursing education by government away from a PERSAL system, there has been a steady decrease in both the numbers and funding of students to study nursing.

Part of the Soweto Uprising in 1976 was the struggle to realise the section of the Freedom Charter that says "The doors of learning and culture shall be opened."

The new nursing curriculum, based on the assessment of state of readiness of Nursing Education Institutions (NEIs), has seen institutions taking in for this year numbers of students that are equivalent to a mere fraction of what they used to previously: i.e. whereas an institution used to take about 350 students per year previously, this number has dropped to about 50 students for this year.

This is extremely concerning for both the youth and the country. For the youth, it means opportunities to study nursing have become scarce at the time when the World Health Organisation (WHO) has assessed the shortage of nurses in the world and found that the world is short of over 6 million nurses and that, for each country to avert a crisis level, it must increase the intake for the production of nurses by at least 8% each year until 2030.

For the country, this means healthcare services will suffer greatly, worsened by emergence of pandemics such as COVID-19. With this in mind, DENOSA Student Movement calls on the government, the regulatory body for nursing the South African Nursing Council (SANC), the Nursing Education Institutions (NEIs) and the professional association for nursing in South Africa, DENOSA, to reflect deeply on the cul-de-sac the country is heading towards in the form of the shortage and the lethargic and uncoordinated way in which the country is doing to either avoid or heading straight towards it.

DENOSA Student Movement believes the main cause of this disaster the country is heading towards is caused by lack of vision and the great disjuncture in the age gap between policy-makers, managers and the practicing nurses. As a result, nursing education institutions were not ready to adapt to a new environment that was imposed on the world by COVID-19 order.

This Youth Day, DENOSA Student Movement calls for a tolerable inter-generational mix into nursing so that the policies that are made are innovative and in tune with the current environment for both student nurses and practicing nurses on the ground.
People who are not well-versed on innovation and technology are not likely to develop policies and manage implementation of policies that are in support of innovation and technology.

DENOSA National Student Movement calls for more and sound funding for nursing education by government and private sector entities and hospital groups.

The ugly face of Gender-Based Violence has become the new enemy for the youth, which has taken away our loved sisters brutally at the hands of their partners.

This kind of violence manifests itself in different ways and is rife in a women-dominated profession like nursing where female partners who are nurses work 12-hour shifts of hard labour and are still expected to play family heads by cooking, washing, preparing kids for school and taking care of their partners which becomes too much for an ordinary human being. As a result, many females are falling victims to Gender-Based violence.

As a solution to this challenge, DENOSA Student Movement calls on increasing creativity in restructuring the workplace environment in terms of working hours, as well as increasing family support systems in the country in the law enforcement wing as well as in social development.

With the increasing unemployment among the youth in the country, and worsened by COVID-19 disaster, DENOSA Student Movement the progressive and immediate solution to this ongoing challenge, which has not been tested yet: release the elders from the workplace at all levels, starting with legislatures, municipalities, private companies, provincial governments and up to national level.

Government's commitment and support system for entrepreneurs and SMMEs, most of whom are young people, needs to improve greatly in all sectors. And this will improve the current dire situation of hopelessness in the country.

DENOSA Student Movement wishes every young person in South Africa a wonderful Youth Day, and may they be more resilient and robust in demanding what they deserve.

End

Issued by DENOSA National Student Movement

For more information, contact:

Nathaniel Mabelebele, National Chairperson
Cell: 071 684 1646

Sphumelele Blose, National Secretary
Cell: 079 300 4409

Address

Corner Biccard And Rissik Street
Fetakgomo

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