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Reply to "NYC nurse strike"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]NYC nurses striking claiming it is due to workload and staffing levels. Meanwhile, they're already making $165k and want to increase it up to $275k at some NY hospitals. GMAFB. That is grotesque overpay for a 4 year degree job. We are supposed to now compensate nurses more than many family docs? Talk about wage inflation spiral. If nurses make $275k I guess we have to pay teachers $200k and docs $1M now. USA wages and cost of labor are out of control. [/quote] What are your sources for these salaries and what types of roles? -RN[/quote] https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/12/nyregion/nurses-strike-hospitals-nyc.html AVERAGE is already $165k. Union is making demands that would push it to $275k. Ridiculous over compensation. Fire all union nursing and replace. [/quote] CRNAs there are making $205/hr per diem or 300-350k salary. That’s more than some physicians make. That’s an amazing value for a masters degree [/quote] So go get your nursing degree and get it on it![/quote] Only those who are ambitious and more highly educated and trained make those higher salaries. The strikers want higher salaries for lower levels of credentialing, basing their argument on the [b]profitability of their employers[/b], not on the actual market value they bring to their roles. If they want to share in their employer's profits, they need to become stockholders, not extortionists. They also surely would not be demanding their wages be reduced in years when their employers profits decline, demonstrating further that this has nothing to do with the value of their labor, which would be the same at an unprofitable hospital as it is where they happen to be fortunate enought to be employed. [/quote] If anyone should be profiting off of sick people, it SHOULD be the nurses who are actually doing the day to day care of those people. I’m sure you have ZERO problems with insurance executives and hospital administrators making bank off of human suffering.[/quote] Omg....stop with the crappy comparison to a CEO. You know what the brutal reality is? EVERYONE in healthcare is overpaid, period. Docs, nurses, healthcareadministration, and hospital/insurance CEOs. You're all massively overpaid. That's why healthcare is bankruping the entire country and costs are out of control compared to the rest of the world. Too many layers of fat. Too many people making too much money when the rest of the world does the same jobs for a fraction of the price with similar or even better outcomes. $275k for nurses is way too much. $5M for execs is too much. [b]Both can be true at the same time.[/b][/quote] Both could be true at the same time, but most nurses aren’t getting $275,000 and many CEOs are making more than $5 million. Do you want to cut costs, start at the top, then see how much you left over for actual patient care, which is what nursing represents.[/quote] You must suck at math. 100 nurses making $275k. $27.5M in labor cost. Make the CEO earning $10M get $0. Nursing costs way more. Everyone in hc gets paid too much. They should cover medical procedures with American insurance or Medicare and allow people to travel abroad for procedures at prescreened hospitals for quality. Americans and our Healthcare system could get tons of procedures done for a fraction of the cost. HC jobs in the US that are now grossly overcompensated would have to compete globally in terms of salary. Even after factoring in having to pay for flights, which would be covered by insurance, it would still save massive amounts of money since American healthcare is so vastly overpriced. [/quote] But the CEO is a no-value added drain on the system. We NEED nurses. So start there and stop whining about nurses.[/quote] Because nurses normally run multimillion dollar healthcare businesses? The roles are different. The skills are different. [b] The market decides the compensation for each. [/b]CEOs always make more money than others in any line of business, because their job function is valued more highly. If you don't like it, go be a CEO yourself. If you can. If you can't, that's a envy issue, reflecting your market value relative to that of those paid more highly whether CEOs or others. [/quote] And that’s exactly what’s happening here. Healthcare CEOs are parasites. They extract value from the system. Their jobs are only “valued” more highly by mouth breathing idiots who don’t understand the actual point of healthcare.[/quote] Their jobs are valued more highly by the stockholders who elect the Board which sets compensation policy. That you don't like their decisions hardly makes them improper. [/quote] Great, then you understand the fact that you don’t like labor unions and worker protections hardly makes them improper.[/quote]
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