Overworked Japanese nurses quitting as they face discrimination from neighbours over Covid
Nurses from over 20 per cent of Japanese hospitals handling coronavirus have resigned citing abuse and discrimination
24 December 2020 • 3:57pm
Nurses from over 20 per cent of Japanese hospitals handling coronavirus have resigned citing abuse and discrimination
Credit: Carl Court /Getty Images AsiaPac
Nurses resigned from more than 20 percent of the Japanese hospitals designated to handle coronavirus cases in the first seven months of the pandemic, with the majority leaving due to abuse and discrimination from people around them.
A study by the Japan Nursing Association has found that nurses across the nation are also leaving the profession due to the excessive demands of work as a result of the pandemic, as well as the risk of infection.
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Japan s Bonenkai Celebrations Canceled Due To Coronavirus - The News Lens International Edition thenewslens.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thenewslens.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Japan s bonenkai celebrations canceled due to coronavirus Bonenkai are a highly popular year-end event in Japanese work culture. But in 2020, coronavirus has forced companies to cancel these forget the year parties.
Japan s forget the year parties will be sorely missed in 2020
For Mitsue Nagasaku, her company’s bonenkai party is one of the highlights of the year. The evening invariably begins at an upmarket restaurant in Tokyo, with the firm picking up the tab for the free-flowing food and drink for her entire department. Games are played, songs are sung and things can get a bit raucous, she admits.
Typically, the revelers will then go on to another venue, a bar, a karaoke box or, for some of the younger employees, a nightclub. Bonenkai, which literally means forget the year party, is a chance for colleagues to get to know one another away from the rigid formality of the average Japanese office environment.