Nurses and midwives walked off the job for four hours for the second time in a month at Lake Macquarie Private Hospital on Thursday in a bid for better pay and conditions. Login or signup to continue reading They also want their meal and toilet breaks, which they often don't have time to take. They held signs saying "ask me how long I hold my pee" and "safe staffing saves lives".

The four-hour strike followed 72 per cent of staff across Ramsay Health Care hospitals in NSW rejecting the company's revised pay offer. Ramsay initially offered the workers an 11 per cent pay rise over three years, but the workers are seeking 18 per cent and improved conditions for parental and personal leave. After the first strike, Ramsay upped its offer to 12.

5 per cent. The action involved members of the NSW Nurses and Midwives' Association (NSWNMA) rallying along the Pacific Highway, outside the hospital at Gateshead. Kate Briggs, a delegate of the Lake Macquarie Private branch, said the pay offer was "pretty insulting".

"We feel undervalued, underpaid and overworked," Mrs Briggs said. Nurses and midwives sought "pay in line with CPI at minimum". "With the cost of living crisis, we all know that everything is going up except our wages," she said.

"There's a lot of pressure on staff to provide the best possible care, but we don't have enough staff to do that. "I work in the operating theatre. We often go without toilet and meal breaks.

It's very hard for us to keep going. "We're supposed to get .