Not like they need much energy wile they are at work anyway /s
They’re also doing the work of 3 people at work. They also put their career on the line if they make a mistake, not to mention the welfare of their patients.
Nurses doing the work of 3 people and doctors not working at all, unfair !
Being in research for a living I have to question how an insight such as this can be gotten from a survey. By just asking the question “do you not eat at work so as to have the money to feed your children at home” you bring in research bias as it is / would be a leading question (a question that can bias the answer). What ppl say is not always what they do. This sort of insight is better found from observation or ethno research. A survey isn’t suited. The Guardian should know better. It probably is provable that nurses are doing this mind but doing better journalism is no bad thing. This is lazy journalism.
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“Some”. The article doesn’t say what % the survey found. It could be 0.00001%.
Not just nhs nurses, most of the non management/ drs are probably doing the same.
7 comments
Not like they need much energy wile they are at work anyway /s
They’re also doing the work of 3 people at work. They also put their career on the line if they make a mistake, not to mention the welfare of their patients.
Nurses doing the work of 3 people and doctors not working at all, unfair !
Being in research for a living I have to question how an insight such as this can be gotten from a survey. By just asking the question “do you not eat at work so as to have the money to feed your children at home” you bring in research bias as it is / would be a leading question (a question that can bias the answer). What ppl say is not always what they do. This sort of insight is better found from observation or ethno research. A survey isn’t suited. The Guardian should know better. It probably is provable that nurses are doing this mind but doing better journalism is no bad thing. This is lazy journalism.
[deleted]
“Some”. The article doesn’t say what % the survey found. It could be 0.00001%.
Not just nhs nurses, most of the non management/ drs are probably doing the same.