Quote Saddened!="Saddened!"I said the wave, not the entire pandemic. Again, just being childish aren't you.
Not really, no. Not taking your annual leave in one particular month doesn't make you make mistakes. NHS staff had all summer up to November to take holidays when there was very little pressure on the hospitals and the covid wards were largely shut. I'd presume the majority did that, when the weather is good and you can do things. You're assuming that they've worked 24/7 for three years, when the vast majority clearly haven't.
You're not the most intelligent group to be fair. You've all mocked me saying they can move stafff, saying they can't. They already do that during normal operating anyway, and most certainly will be during pandemic waves (and especially during pandemic waves when there is a pandemic of annual leave being taken in January) which shows how far off being right you all are. Pumpetypump made a good point though, the impact on moral is a very valid point. Would a nurse mind not taking their annual leave during a pandemic wave if they were given a £10,000 bonus for their efforts during covid? Maybe they would, maybe not.'"
What a load of rubbish. £10,000 bonus per medical professional from where exactly. We have a Tory government who refused to give the nhs staff a pay rise because a clap at 8pm was good enough.
Giving you some credit, retail shops often prevent staff from taking annual leave in busy sale periods so I get where you are coming from but for me it just doesn’t translate to vital care where one slip of the knife or misread of a chart can be fatal / end in litigation.
I can’t be bothered breaking down the rest of your points. Personal attacks on intelligence do you no favours. As I said I agree with some of your earlier points but you’ve dug a big hole for yourself and seem hell bent on defending it. As another poster pointed out you are very welcome to your opinion, as am I and the others who think your idea is laughable.
Either way let’s hope it’s over soon and we can get back to ‘normal’ soon.