The strike called by the All India Government Nurses Federation (AIGNF) yesterday had severely crippled health services at hospitals in the national capital and some other cities in the last two days.
After after the strike began, Delhi government had invoked the stringent Essential Service Maintenance Act (ESMA) and declared the stir as illegal. Two male nurses of Dr Ambedkar Hospital in outer Delhi were today arrested under the Act.
The Centre has constituted a committee headed by the Finance Secretary to look into the outstanding demands which has invited the nurses federation on September 12 for talks.
"We received a call from Union Health Minister J P Nadda and he asked us to withdraw the strike as Delhi and many other cities are grappling with rising cases of dengue and chikungunya. This health crisis was one of the major reasons we decided to call off the stir," he said.
Earlier in the day, Delhi hospitals, hit the hardest by the strike, managed with contractual nurses and interns to make up for the shortage of nursing, while Centre and the nursing federation held talks to find a way out of the crisis.
"We had talks with the government till late night. Members of the nursing federations discussed the issue with the Joint Secretary at Nirman Bhawan after talks with the nursing advisor earlier in the day," Ramchandani said.
Several routine operations in hospitals were cancelled, surgeries postponed, OPD timings curtailed and emergency services affected too.
Ramchandani, however, said, "We will resume duty from
tomorrow morning and things will get back to normal."
The decision to call off the strike comes as a major relief for Delhi particularly, as the situation here had become "critical".
Delhi Chief Secretary K K Sharma held a meeting earlier in the day with Principal Secretary (Home), Commissioner of Police and Health Department officials to take stock of the situation. Sharma was informed during the meeting about the shortage of nursing staff at city hospitals.
During the meeting, medical superintendents of hospitals reported that there was an increased rush of patients at fever clinics and the OPDs on account of the upsurge in dengue and chikungunya cases.
The city Health Department had issued a "public notice" asking the striking staff to resume duty "immediately".
Government hospitals in Delhi, including those run by the Centre, the city government or civic bodies employ about 20,000 nurses, and the federation claimed that most of the staff had joined the strike.
Besides Delhi, we got support from nurses in Chandigarh (PGIMER), Punjab, Rajasthan and Puducherry (JIPMER), the AIGNF spokesperson said.
The Centre had, however, claimed yesterday that only Maharashtra, Delhi and Uttar Pradesh were "partially affected" by the strike.
Delhi government runs nearly 40 hospitals out of which LNJP Hospital is the biggest. Other major hospitals under it include GTB Hospital, DDU Hospital, Dr Baba Saheb Ambedkar Hospital and Chacha Nehru Child Hospital.
Among centrally-run hospitals, Safdarjung Hospital which employs 1,100 nurses, including 160 on contract, too suffered on account of the stir.
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