Staff shortages prompt health authority's plea for Winnipeg nurses to pull extra shifts - Action News
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Manitoba

Staff shortages prompt health authority's plea for Winnipeg nurses to pull extra shifts

The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority has sent "urgent memo" to nurses, asking them to help fillshortages in the emergency departments at both Grace Hospital and St. Boniface Hospital.

Some nurses will answer the call but majority are burned out: union president

Nurses are seen in a blurred background in a hospital setting.
Nurses in Winnipeg are being asked to work even more overtime to help fill shortages in the emergency departments at Grace and St. Boniface hospitals. (Getty Images)

The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority has sent "urgent memo" to nurses, asking them to help fill shortages in the emergency departments at both Grace Hospital and St. Boniface Hospital.

"It has become evident that we are facing a significant staffing challenge that require[s] immediate attention," reads the memo sent out on Monday bythehealth authority.

Nurses are needed to work day, evening and night shiftsat the hospitals between Dec. 18-27.

"Your support is crucial in ensuring that we can provide quality patient care during these busier times of the year," the memo continues. "We understand that this is short notice, and your willingness to assist is immensely appreciated."

Unlike the mandated overtime that burnedout many nurses over the past few years and pushed them to leave thehealth-care field, Monday's request asksnurses to pick up the shifts voluntarily.

A health authorityspokesperson told CBCthe memo was not intended to help fill baseline shifts, but to find more staff to help support emergency departments at the Grace and St. Boniface.

"Over the past few days, intensive care and medicine units at both sites have also been stretched for capacity," the spokesperson said, which has resulted in extended wait times and bed capacity issues throughout the system.

The Grace saw a higher-than-average number of critically ill patients over the weekend,the spokesperson said.

So far in December, St. Boniface hasalso seenmore patients overall, and more whoare critically ill, than average, they said.

'No flex in our system'

Darlene Jackson, president of the 12,000-member Manitoba Nurses Union, said she was not surprised by the memo.

"We know that Grace emergency has got very high vacancy rates. They're using lots and lots of private agency nurses and we are seeing a real rise in individuals going to the emergency departments with all the respiratory illnesses that are happening.

"This is the holiday season and nurses do want to be off with their families over the holiday season. It's always a time where we do have some staff shortages or some staffing difficulties.This year is especially difficult."

A woman with glasses and short red hair is seen in a profile outside on a street
Darlene Jackson, president of the Manitoba Nurses Union, says many nurses are already working overtime shifts at their regular hospitals and health centres. (Radio-Canada)

Manynurses are already working overtime shifts at their regular hospitals and health centres, she added.

"There's just no flex in our system at all," Jackson said.

"Now we're coming up to a holiday where nurses are entitled to have either Christmas or New Year's offunder their collective agreement, and we're already in a staff shortage and getting more and more critical every day."

Underthe MNU'scollective agreement, overtime premiums for nurses who help out in the latest bidinclude an additional$6an hour or 15 per cent above the normal rate of pay, as well as work disruption allowance and evening/weekend shift premiums.

Nurses 'burnedout and overwhelmed'

The WRHA is specifically seeking nurses with previous acute care, medicine or emergency department experience. Recognizing that nurses are already being pushed to the limit, the memo says volunteers will beassigned low acuity tasks.

A Shared Health spokesperson told CBC News on Wednesday that CEO Lanette Siragusa, who is a registered nurse in the province,worked a "buddy" shift to support nurses in the Health Sciences Centre'semergency department last month.

"While Ms. Siragusa's focus is on her executive duties, she remains willing to help however she can over the holidays to support our care teams," they said.

But Jackson said she's not sure how many nurses will answer the call.

a blue face mask
Jackson said she would not oppose the return of a mask mandate in health-care facilities. (narongpon chaibot/Shutterstock)

"I think some nurses will, but for many that I've talked to, they are feeling so burnedout and overwhelmed. They absolutely need time off when they can get it," she said.

"They'vehad absolutely no rest since COVID first reared its head and there's no rest for them now, because when you go to work, you never know whether you're going to be mandated to stay for a second shift."

As a result, anyone going into an emergency department over the holidays with a health concern that's not urgent can expect even longer wait times, Jackson said.

There's "bottlenecking" acrossall emergency departments, she said.

"There are beds unfortunately, there's just no nurses to open some of those beds.We have very limited front-line staff and there's really no resource to get them from anywhere else."

In consideration of that, and the rise inrespiratory viruses adding to the strain, Jackson said she is open to bringing back a mask mandate in health-care facilities.

"I would be happy to see that come back just because we need our nurses to be as healthy as possible, and we need the public to be as healthy as possible," she said.

"I believe the medical officer of health in this province will make the right decision when the time comes. And if they did make that decision Icertainly wouldn't oppose it."

Federal figures suggestthere hasn't been a rush on vaccinations by Canadians this fall. Only 15 per cent of the population aged five and up had received an updated vaccine by Dec. 3.

"I think we need to remind the public that COVID is still out there it's not done with us yetas is the flu," Jackson said.

"We need to keep ourselves healthybut we also need to keep those people around us healthy."

Staff shortages prompt plea from health authority for Winnipeg nurses to pull extra shifts

10 months ago
Duration 1:58
The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority is urgently calling on nurses to pick up extra shifts over the holidays. In an internal memo obtained by CBC - the WRHA is offering nurses a 15% premium to pick up extra shifts from now until December 27th. It says the emergency departments at Grace and St Boniface hospitals are significantly understaffed.

With files from Emily Brass