Om episode
In Zambia, at the Lusaka College of Nursing and Midwifery, college head Dr Priscar Sakala-Mukonka is training the next generation of nurses in their new Critical Care department. Once qualified, her students will join a health care system that is critically short-supplied and short-staffed - not due not to a lack of new nurses, but due to a shortage of paid positions. Despite decades of investment, there is still only 13 nurses per 10,000 people in Zambia, compared to 175 in Switzerland. Many qualified nurses are officially unemployed, and those with jobs do the work of many. Feeling demoralized and undervalued, many have left to pursue nursing careers overseas. What can be done to reverse this trend?
Nyeste episoder
The Documentary Podcast
Heart and Soul: I became a Muslim after the Taliban kept me hostage
2024-09-20 • 26min
The Documentary Podcast
Stories from the New Silk Road: Space
2024-09-19 • 26min
The Documentary Podcast
BBC Trending: Woman, life, surveillance
2024-09-18 • 21min
The Documentary Podcast
The great dolphin release
2024-09-18 • 26min
The Documentary Podcast
Assignment: Ageing without a safety net in Malaysia
2024-09-17 • 26min
The Documentary Podcast
In the Studio: Lenin Tamayo and Q-pop
2024-09-16 • 26min
The Documentary Podcast
Solutions Journalism: The African 'Babelfish'
2024-09-15 • 23min
The Documentary Podcast
The Fifth Floor: Exam nightmares
2024-09-14 • 26min
The Documentary Podcast
BBC OS Conversations: Are we still in love with dating apps?
2024-09-14 • 23min
The Documentary Podcast
Heart and Soul: Indigenous healing on the party island of Ibiza
2024-09-13 • 26min