There is also the fact, rarely considered when the tedious "but nurses...!!" comparisons are rolled out, that if the creaking, shuddering wreck that is the NHS had to answer to the same level of safety responsibility that the railway does, the whole lot would be shut down.
Nurses routinely working 12 hours at a time or more with minimal breaks, staff running about like headless chickens dishing out drugs that can easily kill, hospital wards that look like warzones, people dumped in corridors or sat in the back of an ambo as it queues up outside.... Whilst the indviduals keeping the thing running are generally amazing, the overall safety culture of the NHS is appalling. No professional industry like a railway could possibly contemplate behaving in that way, it would rightly be considered lethal to operate in such an openly haphazard and inadequate manner. There is a far, far higher degree of professionalism presented by our railways than there is by the NHS, and the salaries paid are reflective of that culture. Nurses being paid peanuts is not a reflection on traincrew being overpaid, rather it is one of the symptoms of the chronic underfunding and managed decline of the NHS. The comparison simply isn't valid.