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The Committee notes the information supplied by the Government in its last report.
Article 2, paragraph 2, of the Convention. The Committee notes the Government’s statement that nursing personnel in the public sector have now a different scheme of service from other civil servants and that they are entitled due to the nature of their work to a uniform allowance, a risk allowance and a responsibility/administrative allowance. The Committee requests the Government to communicate in its next report supplementary information on the new conditions of service of nurses in government service and to forward copies of all relevant texts. In addition, the Committee wishes to receive the Government’s views as regards the remuneration levels practised in the health sector in the light of reported strike movements of nurses over low pay and, in some cases, unpaid wages.
Article 5, paragraph 2. With reference to the various memoranda of agreement annexed to the Government’s previous report, most of which were concluded in 1999 for a two-year period, the Committee would be grateful to the Government for supplying copies of all collective agreements in force determining the conditions of work of health-care personnel in the private sector.
Article 7. Further to its previous comment on this point, the Committee notes the Government’s indication that the Federation of Kenya Employers (FKE) has drawn up a Code of Conduct on HIV/AIDS in the workplace which covers all its members, including those employing nursing personnel. The FKE Code of Conduct (Revised 2002) having not been appended in the Government’s report, the Committee would appreciate receiving a copy. The Committee also notes that the Ministry of Health, in consultation with the Nursing Council of Kenya, is in the process of formulating rules to supplement the existing infection prevention and control guidelines. The Committee requests the Government to transmit the text of these rules once they are issued and to keep it informed of any further measures or initiatives aiming at minimizing the risk of HIV infection for health-care providers. Bearing in mind that HIV-positive persons are estimated to occupy up to 40 per cent of beds in most hospitals, the Committee considers that sustained efforts are necessary to effectively contain the risk of patient-to-nursing staff HIV transmission.
Part V of the report form. The Committee notes that according to the latest statistics provided by the Government in its report, there are 40,000 nurses, of whom 18,200 are employed in public medical institutions accounting for 34 per cent of the total Ministry of Health workforce. The Committee understands that a National Nursing Workforce Analysis project, scheduled to be completed in 2005, is currently under way with a view to computerizing and analysing existing supply and demand data on the nursing workforce and student nurses. The Committee would be grateful if the Government could continue supplying information on the application of the Convention in practice, including for instance statistics on the nurse-to-population ratio, the number of students attending nursing schools and the number of nurses leaving or joining the profession, copies of official reports or research studies examining the employment and working conditions of nursing personnel, as well as any practical difficulties encountered in the implementation of the Convention.