I feel like I'm flooding AIBU this morning but this post is not a moan but about being baffled about something that has happened at work.
There is a nurse on the ward I work on who has been a Sister (band 6) for donkey's years and unfortunately she had a deterioration in her health last year which she is finally on the mend from but Occupational Health have declared her as medically exempt from night shifts in relation to her illness. As a result she has been told she can no longer be a Sister and they have downgraded her to a Band 5 staff nurse.
Surely this isn't allowed??
I am currently senior Band 5 and have been thinking about going into Band 6 territory but I am also medically exempt from nights due to a chronic condition I have and I'm now worried that I will never be able to progress.
I spoke to my colleague about it (a separate one from the Sister involved) and she said that the Managers are allowed to make this decision even if the reason for not doing nights is officially medical (as decided by OH) as opposed to a personal choice.
My friend was going on about the contracts saying we need to provide 24 hour care which is why Band 6 wouldn't be appropriate but if that's the case they shouldn't let people with medical conditions (that prevent some shift work) from being a nurse full stop if that's their stance. It's madness to say 24 hour care is essential for a Sister but it doesn't matter if you're Band 5. I don't understand why the ability to do the job is based around whether the nurse can do night shifts.
I'm just confused by the logic of it and I genuinely feel that not allowing some nurses to progress simply because of a medical condition they have is discriminatory?
Perfectly happy to be told I'm BU and would love it if someone could explain to me why legally it's allowed to do this.