Photo Credit: Maya Tzaban, spokeswoman for the Padeh-Poriya Medical Center
Part of the multidisciplinary team of more than 30 doctors and nurses, at the Baruch Padeh Medical Center in Poriya

A nationwide strike by nurses in Israel is set to begin Wednesday in hospitals, clinics and public health facilities.

The nurses are striking “in response to the government’s incompetence in handling the extreme violence in the healthcare system and the failure in implementing the recommendations of the committee to minimize violence in the health care system, which were published nine months ago,” the Histadrut Labor Federation said in a statement.

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“The nurses of Israel have decided their lives are not expendable,” said Ilana Cohen, chair of the Histadrut Labor Union for nurses. “We have therefore declared a full strike. Until active measures are taken to resolve the unbearable work load and to protect the medical and support health care staff, nurses will not concede.”

Violence against medical personnel in clinics and hospitals in Israel is not new, but it’s been a growing concern in recent years.

Several incidents have been reported, including severe beatings of nurses and/or doctors by family members of patients and in one case even a murder after a nurse was set on fire in March 2017 by an angry, mentally ill patient at an HMO clinic.

Nurses will strike in the ambulatory services at clinics and outpatient departments, among other facilities, and hospitals will be on Sabbath schedules. Delivery rooms, dialysis departments, oncology and fertility departments and intensive care units (ICUs) — including neonatal units (NICU) — will all run on limited schedules as well, with a special team on call for emergencies.

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Hana Levi Julian is a Middle East news analyst with a degree in Mass Communication and Journalism from Southern Connecticut State University. A past columnist with The Jewish Press and senior editor at Arutz 7, Ms. Julian has written for Babble.com, Chabad.org and other media outlets, in addition to her years working in broadcast journalism.