Grenada's Health Minister Says Monthly Honorarium is Aimed at Preventing Mass Exodus of Nurses

ST GEORGE’S, Grenada – Minister of Health Senator Jonathan LaCrette disclosed on Tuesday that the monthly EC$500 (One EC dollar=US$0.37) honorarium that will be paid to nurses next year is Government’s way of deterring them from pursuing overseas opportunities.

lacremfMinister of Health Senator Jonathan LaCretteMaking his contribution to the 2023 Estimates of Revenue and Expenditure debate in the Senate, he said the new administration was extending an olive branch to the healthcare workers who he acknowledged had not been treated as they should over the years.

“We need you, you cannot leave. If you go our health sector is finished. We understand that you want upward mobility, but we have not been able to provide that through successive governments over the years,” LaCrette said.

“The olive branch was extended to say to them that you can’t leave us at this critical juncture in our healthcare cycle. I am going to say it again – ‘nurses we need you, doctors we need you. The situation is not of the best, we understand that, but hear the cry of your minister. If you leave we are crippled, if you leave we are doomed, give us the opportunity to value you and to show you that you mean something to our system’,” he pleaded.

Over the years Grenada has lost dozens of nurses and other healthcare workers to regional and international recruiters offering better wages, salaries, and benefits.

In his 2023 Budget statement delivered on December 5, Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell said his administration was taking concrete steps to address the human resource capacity challenges facing the health sector.

“Of great concern is the mass exodus of our nurses. We have engaged the nursing fraternity and have listened to their concerns, including poor working conditions, job security, nurse shortages, and inadequate compensation. We will move swiftly to address the regularization of our nurses and the training of more nursing professionals,” he said before announcing the honorarium.

“As an immediate step in addressing the matter of compensation, we will pay all our nurses an honorarium of EC$500 per month, or EC$6,000 for the next 12 months, while we work towards a long-term solution. A sum of EC$4.2 million has been allocated for this initiative,” said the Prime Minister.