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WORKING IN DENMARK

Lack of staff ‘biggest challenge’ for Danish health authorities

A lack of staff in the Danish health system is the greatest challenge currently faced by the sector in the country, according to a senior health official.

Lack of staff 'biggest challenge' for Danish health authorities
Nurses are among qualified staff expected to be in shortage in Denmark in coming years. Photo: Signe Goldmann/Ritzau Scanpix

The head of the health committee for Denmark’s Regional health authorities, Karin Friis Bach, raised concerns over the staff shortage in comments to DR on Friday and repeated those sentiments in an interview with news wire Ritzau on Saturday.

The five Regions, the authorities which administrate hospitals and public healthcare services in Denmark, believe staff shortages are likely to cause issues for a number of years into the future.

“We are looking at some smaller year groups [graduating from education programmes, ed.] which will be the ones taking jobs in the health service at the same time the number of elderly people with chronic illnesses increases,” Bach said.

The Covid-19 crisis and resultant strain on the health service has further exacerbated staffing challenges at hospitals and clinics, she said.

“That gave an extra push to the problem we were already looking at, “she said.

The senior health official said that while sufficient funding was important, health services could not exist without sufficient staff.

Regional health boards have long expected to see staff shortages hit in coming years and have therefore looked for ways to address the issue.

“This is about how we can use the resources we have in the most sensible way possible. We are working with digitisation, with more targeted treatment, and with giving more focuses pathways for patients,” she said.

Last week’s announcement by universities of their new intakes for the forthcoming academic year showed an ongoing decline in the popularity of occupations including nursing as well as childcare and teaching.

Those three education programme types, as well as social worker educations, have seen an overall decrease by 14 percent in application numbers since 2019.

Member comments

  1. One compromise may be to offer foreign students enrollments and stipends, and a commitment to stay and practice medicine or nursing for X years after school and boards are complete, or they have to pay it back. Very common in other countries.

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DENMARK AND ISRAEL

Copenhagen University rejects call to condemn Gaza ‘genocide’

The University of Copenhagen has refused a demand from student protesters that it recognise Israel's attack on Gaza as a "genocide" and condemn it, ahead of a major protest on Tuesday.

Copenhagen University rejects call to condemn Gaza 'genocide'

“The University of Copenhagen as an institution has no, and will have no, position on the ongoing conflict in Gaza,” the university wrote on its page on X, after students who have erected a tent camp on the university’s grounds made a call for official condemnation of Israel’s attack one of their list of six demands to university management. 

The group, Students against the Occupation, or Bevægelsen Studerende mod Besættelsenholds plans to hold a major demonstration on Tuesday afternoon at 3.30 pm.

“We stand united with students and employees from other Danish universities who also demand that their universities take responsibility and action,” the flyer for the protest reads. “This is a call to action to mobilise as many people as possible in solidarity with the Palestinian people.” 

In its post, the university management made it clear that both students and employees were welcome to express their position on the conflict — whether in support of the Palestinians or in support of Israel — and to do so on the university’s premises.

But it said that as a place of learning, the university would avoid taking an official position on such a divisive and contentious issue. 

“The university management cannot and should not express an opinion on behalf of the university’s employees and students about political matters, including about the ongoing conflict,” it wrote. 

The university’s post also included a warning to demonstrators that while the university respected their right to free expression it would not tolerate attacks or harassment of other students or university employees. 

“The University of Copenhagen will not accept that the tent camp leads to harassment of employees and students, or that anyone’s safety is put at risk,” they wrote, adding that university management was “in dialogue with the authorities and other partners to clarify the logistical challenges and questions the tent camp creates” .

Students occupied an area on the university grounds on Monday as part of a pro-Palestinian demonstration, issuing six demands to university management. 

As well as the call to describe Israel’s invasion of Gaza as a “genocide”, the students have also demanded that the university disclose all investments in coompanies linked to Israel, sell any investments in companies that benefit from the conflict, and “end institutional cooperation with Israeli academic institutions”. 

The protest comes after massive student protests against Israel’s attack on Gaza mounted at US universities, with violent clashes and accusations of police brutality at New York’s Columbia University. 

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