From Tuesday, interns are called to an indefinite strike to protest their working conditions. They want a better status and deplore a degradation of care. Europe 1 went to meet two interns in medicine from Nantes, who share their feelings.

Another sensitive subject for the government in these times of mobilization against the pension reform: the sling in hospitals. From Tuesday, the interns are called to an indefinite strike while the crisis of the hospital broods for several months already. And the motto of this movement is clear: "exploited interns, patients in danger".

"Nobody would go on a plane with a pilot who has not slept for 30 hours"

Interns denounce the degradation of care and ask for a better status. It must be said that they chained hours, with a salary of 1,400 to 1,700 euros per month. At the University Hospital of Nantes, Jules Lecomte, anesthetist-resuscitation intern, is in his ninth year of study and practice. He earns 1,700 euros per month with dangerously hallucinating schedules. "We often do weeks to 100 hours of work." My last guard was Saturday, I slept twenty minutes, "he says at the microphone of Europe 1.

He takes an image to make clear the extent of the dangerousness of the situation. "No one would go on a plane with a pilot who has not slept for 30 hours, when you come to the emergency room and you have the guard who has not slept for 30 hours, well, you take the same risks, "he says.

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"We had not gone on strike for seven years"

Camille Lecardonnel is an intern in emergency medicine. The young woman still loves this job despite the pressure, more and more heavy, and considerable responsibilities. "We still have the lives of people in our hands.If we are too exhausted, the risk is that a patient dies in our hands," says the intern in medicine. Camille Lecardonnel denounces "unsustainable rhythms and burn-out insured." "I have friends who make it and I'm very worried that they're committing suicide," she says. "We had not gone on strike for seven years," she insists. It fears a hospital implosion if we do not treat interns at their fair value.