Life in Iran TodayOne Hundred Nurses Emigrate From Iran Each Month

One Hundred Nurses Emigrate From Iran Each Month

-

“The rate of nurses’ emigration has become increased in comparison to the past years, and 100 nurses monthly emigrate from Iran on average. Other countries strongly welcome Iranian nurses,” said Mohammad Mirza-Beigi, the director-general of Iran’s Nursing Organization, on Thursday, April 8.

Nurses’ emigration has dramatically grown while the country extremely needs the human resources in health and medical sectors due to the coronavirus outbreak. Iran is the worst-hit country in the Middle East regarding the illness. According to the Health Ministry, 63,884 people have lost their lives to the pandemic as of April 8.

Health professionals, and even members of the country’s Covid-19 combating headquarters, challenge official statistics, reckoning this number is not the whole story. According to Iranian dissidents’ reports, the actual number of fatalities is four times the Health Ministry’s figure.

“Over 246,400 people have died of the novel coronavirus in 535 cities checkered across all of Iran’s 31 provinces,” stated the opposition Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK).

Why Nurses Emigrate from Iran?

Contrary to other countries, Iranian nurses face enormous dilemmas in various aspects. Despite their sincere work amidst the Covid-19 crisis, thousands of these selfless people have yet to receive their monthly salaries for months. This is while Iranian nurses endure additional hardship due to the country’s lack of adequate health and medical staff, which has made the dilemma more complicated in the past 14 months.

“It seems that [the government] is wasting time. Such behaviors towards nurses are not an inspiration in this status quo,” said Mirza-Beigi. “In addition to 140,000 nurses who care for hospitalized patients, we have 60,000 nursing students in the grade of expert to PhD in the medical sciences universities. Also, we have 30,000 nurses who provide services for home care units in a community-oriented manner.”

The number provided by the head of Nursing Organization is far lower than the global average. It means there are three nurses for each 1,000 citizens while the global average is at least four to eight nurses for every 1,000 people. “In comparison to other countries that have at least between four to eight nurses per each 1,000 people, we have only 0.9 nurses, meaning that we have less than one nurse per every 1,000 people,” Mirza-Beigi added.

The catastrophe, however, is not limited to nurses alone. Their family members also tolerate backbreaking dilemmas in financial and even psychological fields. Iran News Update reported last year that 111 medical staff have died of Covid-19 in Iran as of April 17, 2020. Officials’ refusal to provide necessary equipment is the main reason for the high death rate among Iranian nurses.

In a September 3, 2020 report, Amnesty International announced that over 7,000 health workers had lost their lives globally to the coronavirus. The organization ranked Iran with 164—official figure—as the 11th country in term of fatalities among medical staff.

Also, former Science Minister Mostafa Moeen had already spoken about the high mortality cases among Iranian health workers. “Why should the casualties among our dear medical staff, whether doctors, nurses, or pharmacists, be higher than the international average? Regrettably, over 180 physicians, nurses, and other irreplaceable forces of health and medicine have been martyred, and over 6,000 have contracted the disease,” Moeen said in an interview with Sharq daily on August 2, 2020.

Latest news

Sixty-two Members of the Iranian Regime’s Assembly of Experts Call for Keeping the Strait of Hormuz Closed

As signs of divisions and rivalry at the highest levels of the Iranian regime have become increasingly apparent, 62...

Workers and Retirees in Iran Once Again Protest Over Living Conditions

Retirees and workers held protest gatherings and marches in several cities across Iran on Sunday, June 28, once again...

Bread Prices Rise Again in Tehran; Fresh Pressure on Household Budgets

With the implementation of new bread prices in Tehran on Saturday, June 27, a new wave of concern has...

Economics and Ethics in Iran; From Poverty to the Commodification of the Human Body

The economy affects more than people's income, employment, or purchasing power; it can also penetrate the deepest layers of...

WSJ: A Cryptocurrency Exchange at the Heart of Iran’s Regime’s Financial Transactions

The Wall Street Journal reported in an investigative article that Iran's regime has used the cryptocurrency exchange CoinEx in...

Iran’s Statistical Center: Year-on-Year Inflation Reached 88.6% in June

The Statistical Center of the Iranian regime announced that the year-on-year inflation rate in June reached 88.6%. The annual...

Must read

S.Africa to urge Iran to comply fully with IAEA

Reuters: South Africa, which takes the chair of the...

Iran looks to prolonging nuclear talks; U.S. demands cuts

Reuters: Iran and six world powers on Tuesday appeared...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you