This is like how American schools are authorizing unqualified people to be teachers to "resolve" the teacher shortage. It's not "empowering," it's a dangerous short-term solution that they're choosing over fixing the actual issue because that would require making actual positive change.
This isn't empowering, but more like exploiting.
Maybe it's different in SK, but in many countries nurse is a very hard working low paying job with too many responsibilities already. Adding doctors' jobs on that pile wouldn't help anyone.
This is like how American schools are authorizing unqualified people to be teachers to "resolve" the teacher shortage. It's not "empowering," it's a dangerous short-term solution that they're choosing over fixing the actual issue because that would require making actual positive change.
This isn't empowering, but more like exploiting.
Maybe it's different in SK, but in many countries nurse is a very hard working low paying job with too many responsibilities already. Adding doctors' jobs on that pile wouldn't help anyone.
Disclaimer: my wife was a nurse.