A resignation letter from the National Health Service by an experienced Scottish nurse is published with permission to use the author's name.
Pharmacy/Pharmaceutical Unit
woodend hospital
aberdeen
August 15, 2022
Please accept this letter as notification that I am resigning from my position as a Medicines Management Specialist Nurse in NHS Grampian.
In accordance with my terms and conditions, I have given advance notice, including 3 months' notice as stated in my contract, and my last day of work will be Thursday, December 15, 2022.
I have been working as a nurse in NHS Grampian since 2004 and feel that I can no longer continue working in the NHS with the current allopathic model of care. During the last ten years of my nursing career, I watched the NHS transform into a service that embraced and promoted 'medicine for all ills'. Countless outstanding nurses, myself included, have been forced to take a holistic approach to caring for patients and to reduce the amount of care, time, and care patients need due to increased demand for services, staffing pressures, and mismanagement. I’ve seen people struggle with providing support.
Since the beginning of 2020 I have become increasingly disillusioned with the NHS. Response to new coronavirus infectionThis meant that existing, evidence-based, effective, inexpensive and widely available medicines were not used as treatments. However, a new gene therapy developed at a cost of millions of pounds It waswas hastily approved under the guise of being a vaccine and claiming to have completed effective trials.
I am currently witnessing unprecedented levels of hospital occupancy during a time of year when hospitals are typically quiet. Colleagues say publicly that the usual summer lull will not come in 2022. All the while, they are ignoring the elephant in the room and using massive cognitive dissonance to deny the fact that coronavirus “vaccines” are causing major illness, injury, and death. .
My decision to leave both the NHS and nursing was not easy, but it was not impulsive or unconsidered. Since mid-2021, I have had great difficulty adapting to my role and the standard of my work has been declining to reflect this struggle. My desire to remain in my post is simply driven by loyalty to both you, my line manager, and my colleagues. I am no longer happy with any aspect of my role, have no desire to return to clinical nursing, and have absolutely no desire to be part of the NHS in the future, no matter how small. I don't think so.
All of these factors have had a huge impact on my health, especially over the past six months. It is primarily for this reason, combined with my desire to move forward with my life and be involved in a non-allopathic and more holistic model of personal care, that I am sadly inclined to resign. .
I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for your support as my line manager over the past four years. I appreciate and appreciate your consistent management style and approachability. Additionally, I would like to express my sincere gratitude for all the opportunities and experiences I have had in this role that have allowed me to grow professionally and personally. The wealth of skills I have developed over many years of work will be of great help in the future. The only regret I have about leaving the NHS is leaving behind the wonderful colleagues I have enjoyed working with during my almost seven-year tenure.
I want to do whatever I can to help with the transition, including completing my responsibilities and training other team members. If there is anything else we can do to help during this time, please let us know.
We wish you all the best in your future endeavors, and we will continue to keep in touch with you.
Sincerely,
Francis Adamson.