Definitiely wouldn't have happened where my wife worked, she was on the covid ICU wards all through the pandemic, turning patients in bed was one of the biggest demands of the job, since most of then were not on the skinny side.
It's like any public sector business, runs badly though general incompetence of the financial side, then they privitise it and runs badly due to profit making. I struggle to see why there cant be good moral leader that can make the public sector work like an efficient business. Putting in unit managers at 4 times the average nurse pay doesn't help, and adds to the problem since they cant afford 4 nurses now.
And I dont see the need for a degree to become a nurse. It's worked fine for 50 years, when mess it up. My wife learned pre-degree days, hands dirty on the wards (probably literally!) and a third of the time in the classroom over 3 years. Degree nurses walked in from uni without a real days' experience, or later were on the wards but not allowed to do any of the real work (may have changed now, I stopped asking years ago since it just got me angry to hear how nurses were treated).