Nurses chant for care, not cuts, as Manitoba forges ahead with health-care overhaul - Action News
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Manitoba

Nurses chant for care, not cuts, as Manitoba forges ahead with health-care overhaul

Nurses came wavingflags and holding placards, while somelooked as if they were off to the spa for a facial treatment in aswipe at a widely mocked recruitment campaign from the government, during a rally at the Manitoba Legislature Wednesday.

An estimated 400 nurses and their supporters demand help for exhaustion

Manitoba nurses and their supporters, including those dressed as if they're going to the spa for a facial treatment, chant at a rally for better patient care at the Manitoba Legislature on Wednesday. (Ian Froese/CBC)

The nurses came wavingflags andholding placards, while somelooked as if they were off to the spa for a facial treatment, in aswipe at a widely mocked recruitment campaign from the government.

A rally that included an estimated 400 nurses and their supporters spilled from the front steps of the Manitoba Legislature on Wednesday, as health-care professionals demanded that the government stop itsconsolidation of the health-care system,which they say is putting the care ofpatients at risk.

Nurses are burnt out fromthe growing demands of their jobs, they claimed, and have been left to fend for themselves when dealing with violent, meth-fuelled patients.

A few attendees painted their faces as if they were getting a facial treatment in a dig at a recent recruitment advertisement depictingnursesinuniform at a spa. The image was removed after it was criticized assexist and patronizing.

Patients trying to help tired nurses

Lana Penner, the union representative for nurses at Health Sciences Centre, said care is being compromised on a daily basis.

"Nurses are exhausted and injured. They're desperate to care for more and more patients, and they are aghast when their patients say, 'Don'tchange my dressing, you're too busy.My brother, my sister will do it,'" Penner told the crowd at a lunch-hour rally organized by the Manitoba Nurses Union."That's not right."

She said nurses are caught in the middle of the consolidation of the province's health-care system, which the province says isnecessary to reduce wait times and find efficiencies inan otherwisebloated system. The government plans to close the emergency departments at Concordia and Seven Oaks hospitals this year.

A recent Friday night at HSC'semergency departmentwas so crampedpatients were standing in the hallway while they waited for a bed, Penner claimed.

An estimated 400 nurses and their supporters rallied at the Manitoba Legislature on Wednesday, May 1, 2019, demanding that the government halt changes to the province's health-care system which they say are putting the patient care at risk. (Ian Froese/CBC )

"And there's no privacy, either," she continued. Some patients are desperate for help, she said, "but there's so much need and there's not enough hands to do it."

Manitoba Nurses Union president Darlene Jackson again called on the governmentto reverse its decision to overhaul the health-care system because she said it isn't working. Nogovernment MLA showed up to the rally.

"They need to stop the cuts and closures. They need to let us catch up," Jacksontold reporters afterward. "We are drowning."

Jackson asked the government for help, saying it could begin by hiring more nurses.

Nursing vacancies persist

"We've been in a chronic nursing shortage for many years. We're now in an acute nursing shortage," Jackson said."There's vacancies out there that aren't filled, and that's what's actually driving the mandated and the voluntary overtime."

Data acquired by the MNU through a freedom of information requestshows a 32 per cent increase in overtime hours withinGrace Hospitalbetween January and September of 2017 and January to September of 2018.

Health Minister Cameron Friesenattributedthe increase in overtime to the "long overdue" transformation of the health-care system.

"There are jobs in the system for all nurses who desire one," his office wrote in an email.

About 400 nurses and their supporters crowded the steps of the Manitoba Legislature for a rally organized by the Manitoba Nurses Union. (Ian Froese/CBC)

"Positions are being regularly posted throughout the system, including 32 neo-natal [intensive care unit]and 33 critical care positions at HSC Winnipeg and St. Boniface Hospital that were recently filled."

NDPLeader Wab Kinew said the Tories are effectively a write-off when it comes to health care ,and onlya change in government would help.

"You don't have to take it from me," he said. "You can take it from the several hundred nurses who showed up today and said that they're frustrated, they're tired and they're worried about their patients because of what this government's doing to health care."

Nurses are being driven to the brink,Liberal Leader Dougald Lamont said, and the government is making it worse.

"In dealing withhealth care, you shouldbasically treat it the way doctors do, which is to say, 'Do no harm,' and that's not what they're doing," he said. "It'sall just aboutthe bottom line."

Nurses rally on steps of the Manitoba Legislature

5 years ago
Duration 1:01
Nurses rallied on the front steps of the Manitoba Legislature on Wednesday. They say they are burnt out from the growing demands of their jobs and have been left to fend for themselves when dealing with violent, meth-fuelled patients.