Almost two-thirds of nurses believe there are too few of them working in the NHS to keep patients safe and give them proper care, a survey has revealed.
Understaffing and the increasingly complex medical needs posed by an ageing population are creating a “deadly mix” for patients, the Royal College of Nursing warned on Monday.
More than one in five (22%) of nurses working in hospitals or community settings across the UK told the RCN that the number of nurses on duty in their last shift was “well below what was needed”, which left care “significantly compromised” and a “high level of risk of harm to patents and staff”.
Of the more than 13,000 nurses who took part in the survey 64% said they thought that the number of registered nurses on that shift was “below” or “well below” what was needed to ensure safe care.
One nurse working in an A&E in England told the union: “The shift was completely unsafe and it felt like a miracle that avoidable harm was not caused.”
Prof Nicola Ranger, the RCN’s chief executive and general secretary, will urge ministers to bring in mandatory minimum safe nurse staffing levels when she opens its annual congress on Monday.
“Widespread vacancies of registered nurses are always unsafe,” she said. “But the risk is being compounded by the demands of delivering ever more complex care to an ageing, sicker population, with multiple conditions. It’s a deadly mix.”
Speaking in Liverpool, she will accuse ministers of failing to ensure that the health service has enough nurses and the nursing profession is being “set up to fail”.
Source: The Guardian, 18 May 2026
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