United Nurses Association - UK

United Nurses Association - UK Deliver your humanity through us Birth of United Nurses Association (UNA).....
Beena Baby was the daughter daily labourers. However she managed to get a BSc.

They were not in a position to support their daughter who was brilliant in her studies. degree in nursing with the support of an education loan. She was offered a job with Asian Heart Hospital by a recruitment agent who promised her Rs 15,000 a month. It was only on joining that she realised that she’d be paid less than half that sum, and that too for working 14-16 hours a day. On such meager wage

s, she could neither support her family nor repay the education loan. She could not quit the job for a better one as she had to sign a bond with hospital authorities before joining and the hospital demanded Rs 50,000 to release her educational certificates, which it had kept. Beena didn’t have the money. It was this last straw that broke her spirit. una
On the morning of 10 October 2011, Beena Baby, the 22-year-old staff nurse hanged herself in her flat in the suburb of Santa Cruz, a flat that she shared with eight other nurses.The su***de news of Beena very much disturbed Jasmin Sha, a 29-year-old male nurse who had returned home to Kerala after a job stint with a hospital in Qatar. Perturbed by, he called a get-together of nurses, batch mates, friends and acquaintances in Thrissur. In the meeting he made his anger and anguish loud and clear. This was on 12th October; just two days after Beena’s body had been found hanging in Mumbai. Though none of the nurses present knew Beena personally they were all equally upset. Many other nurses called the gathering to express their solidarity. But it was a distress call from a nurse at a private hospital in Hyderabad that startled them. The nurse said that she was in a debt trap and close to doing what Beena had done. She was, unable to pay back even a single installment of the education loan availed for the nursing course which is now amounted to Rs 10 lakhs. Jasmin and a few friends met the manager of the Canara Bank branch from which she had taken the loan. The manager opened a file and showed them the status of education loans availed by nursing students. There were 46 students in exactly the same dire situation. Stunned by this they took the phone numbers of all 46 nurses and contacted them. Many had given up nursing for ‘better jobs’. Many of the men, for example, had taken to manual labour, rubber tapping and driving auto rickshaws. It was mostly the women nurses, with far fewer job options, who were in distress. Determined to help, Jasmin started a Facebook community. That is how the United Nurses Association (UNA) came into being. The response was astonishing. In three days, its membership went up to 2,000. Jasmin and his friends registered the association on 16 November, and organised a meeting the next day in Thrissur. The meeting was attended by 136 nurses, some of whom took charge as office bearers. Sudeep Krishnan, one of those who had quit nursing to become a rubber tapper, took on the role of UNA’s general secretary.

06/03/2026

Standing with Kerala Nurses: Strike for Dignity and a Decent Life, Not Against Patients or Hospitals

Statement on the Nurses’ Strike under UNA – From My Perspective

I have worked for more than 9 years in Kerala as a Registered Nurse and am currently working in Canada as a Registered Practical Nurse. During my time in Kerala, I was also part of the UNA team, and I personally witnessed the struggles and challenges faced by nurses in private hospitals. I speak not as a current union representative, but as a concerned professional and community member who understands these issues firsthand.

Nurses dedicate four years of rigorous study and countless hours of work, including night shifts and high responsibilities. Yet, many earn low wages that do not reflect their education, experience, or the essential role they play in hospitals. Even after years of service, many nurses cannot earn enough to support their families or maintain basic living standards.

The ongoing strike under UNA is a demand for a minimum wage of ₹40,000 per month, which recognizes nurses’ education, experience, and dedication. Nurses are the heart of every hospital, yet private hospitals profit from their work without fair compensation. This issue is even more critical as Kerala’s health tourism sector grows, with hospitals expected to earn significant revenue in the future, while nurses remain underpaid.

The strike highlights several critical concerns:
1. Low Wages Despite Education and Experience: Nurses invest years in rigorous study and professional training. Despite their qualifications, long hours, and night shifts, many cannot earn enough to support their families.
2. Demand for Minimum Wage: UNA is demanding a minimum wage of ₹40,000 per month for all private hospital nurses in Kerala. This is essential to ensure that nurses’ education, experience, and dedication are fairly recognized.
3. Legal Rights & Dignity: Nurses remain underpaid while hospitals profit, particularly as Kerala becomes a major health tourism hub. The government has not adequately addressed this issue, leaving nurses undervalued despite their indispensable role.
4. Collective Action: Uniting all nurses under one platform allows better negotiation with hospital management and the government. Collective agreements can ensure consistent pay, fair working conditions, and prevent exploitation across hospitals.
5. Focus on Safety and Respect: Fair wages and recognition are closely tied to job security, respect, and safe working conditions, directly impacting nurses’ well-being and the quality of patient care.
6. Preventing Nurses from Going Abroad: Many skilled nurses leave Kerala seeking better pay and working conditions abroad. Ensuring fair wages and protections locally is crucial to retain talent, strengthen the healthcare system, and reduce the brain drain to countries where nurses are more valued.
7. Exploitation by Private Hospitals: Private hospitals often utilize nurses’ skills without proper compensation, prioritizing profit over staff well-being. Despite nurses being highly educated and experienced, hospitals fail to provide wages that reflect their contributions.
8. Call for Government Intervention: The strike is not only a fight for fair wages but a plea for justice, dignity, and recognition. The government must step in to enforce minimum wages, regulate private hospitals, and ensure fair treatment for nurses, recognizing their critical role in Kerala’s healthcare and growing health tourism sector.

I share this statement to inform the community, policymakers, and courts about the reasons behind the strike and to urge decisive action to ensure justice, dignity, and fair treatment for Kerala’s nurses.

— Anish Mathew, Canada 🇨🇦

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