Hospital cleaners qualify as nurses

06 July 2018 - 10:53
By Siya Tsewu
Phathiswa Sotyantsi  is now  a nurse at Stutterheim Hospital. /  SUPPLIED
Phathiswa Sotyantsi is now a nurse at Stutterheim Hospital. / SUPPLIED

"There was no greater feeling than walking into Stutterheim Hospital no longer as a cleaner, but clad in a white dress because I was now a nurse."

Those were the words of an excited Phathiswa Sotyantsi who used to clean human waste, blood, vomit and urine for 10 years at Stutterheim Hospital in Eastern Cape.

This week, Sotyantsi and 18 other cleaners and six porters graduated through Lilitha Nursing College for nursing posts in the department of health.

Studying while employed full-time is no small feat but graduating on Wednesday was more special because they now go back to work in new positions.

The 50-year-old mother of four is finally making her dreams a reality.

"I had always had the dream of being a nurse but life happened in my younger days and I could not become a nurse. I remember that I even used to like the smell of medicine and pills when taking my own mother to hospital.

"There were challenges along the way but I still believed in myself and in my dream. I constantly told myself not to give up," Sotyantsi said.

She started studying in 2015 and has finally qualified as an enrolled nurse. But, as the big dreamer that she is, she already has her eye set on being a professional nurse.

The levels of nurses are as follows:

Enrolled nurse's assistant: they check blood pressure but cannot administer medication;

Enrolled nurse: they can administer medication;

Professional nurse: they administer scheduled medication, are accounting officers who supervise the other levels.

"When I worked as a cleaner I was dedicated to my work because I knew that infection control was up to the cleaners because it was our responsibility to keep the hospital clean.

"I used to watch the nurses in the wards and I wished that was me. Now it is me. I am very proud of myself and I am grateful to my family for all their support," she said.

Health MEC Helen Sauls-August congratulated all the nurses who graduated this week, particularly those who were caregivers and general assistants in their facilities.

"They must treat people at public health facilities with dignity and respect and honour the values of the nursing profession such as empathy and care for the people who visit health facilities," she said.

Provincial health spokesman Lwandile Sicwetsha said they were proud of the new graduates.

"The department is proud that its effort to upscale and train general staff is producing positive results. The new acquired knowledge will also alleviate staff shortages in those facilities. This should motivate all other general workers to seize such opportunities afforded by the department."