The nurse who cared for Prime Minister Johnson resigns and blasts the government

A nurse who took care of the prime minister Boris Johnson in the intensive care unit of the hospital, where he was fighting against her Covid-19, is leaving her job, with the British newspaper Guardian writing that she is outraged by the government’s treatment of health workers.

Jenny McGee, from New Zealand, was one of two nurses chosen to pay tribute to Johnson for the care he received while in hospital last April, when, he said, the National Health System (NHS) saved his life.

However, in a decision that embarrassed Johnson, McGee has now resigned from the NHS, blasting her ex-patient and his government for dealing with health care staff, according to a Guardian report today.

“We do not receive the respect and now not even the salary we are entitled to. I’m just sick of it all. Therefore, I submitted my resignation “, McGee said, as the newspaper writes, in a Channel 4 TV documentary that will be shown on May 24.

McGee was referring to the government’s harshly criticized proposal to increase NHS staff salaries by 1%, a proposal that Johnson’s political opponents and unions describe as offensive to those who have fought the pandemic.

“Many nurses feel that the government has not led very effectively, indecision, so many mixed messages. “It was just very embarrassing,” McGee said, referring to the British government’s overall response.

Johnson’s office did not directly comment on the nurse’s remarks, but said the government would do “everything it can to support” NHS staff.

“We are extremely grateful for the care provided by NHS staff, especially during the pandemic,” a spokeswoman said. “That is why it was exempted from the wider wage freeze applied to the public sector as a result of the difficult economic situation created by the pandemic.”

St Thomas Hospital issued a statement from McGee stating that she was “excited as she begins a new contract as a nurse in the Caribbean, before vacationing in her home New Zealand later this year”.

“After the hardest year of my nursing career, I am one step behind the NHS, but I hope to return in the future,” he said.

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