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More nurses leaving profession due to treatment and pay, unions say

An increasing number of nurses and nursing students are leaving the profession due to poor pay, a lack of support, violence at work, and a lack of control over their hours, according to nursing unions in Ontario.

Many nurses leave after only 2 years on the job, unions say

Nurses are consistently dealing with long hours, poor pay, and sometimes violence and aggression in the workplace, unions say, and many of them lose their interest in the profession for such reasons. (Darrian Traynor/Getty Images)

An increasing number of nurses and nursing students are leaving the profession due to poor pay, a lack of support, violence at work, and a lack of control over their hours, according to nursing unions in Ontario.

Emily Lagac, who is in her final year in the registered nursing program at Algonquin College, said many of her fellow students have droppedout of the program because they can't handle the stress of the job.

"As a nurse, you know people are going to die. We're handling sick, injured people,"Lagac said.

"I have seen family aggression towardnurses when something isn't going right, or miscommunication."

Lagac said she plansto stay in the field of nursing until retirement despite all of these issues and hardships the profession faces, because she believes it isworth it in the end.

A recentreport from the Canadian Federation of Nurses Union(CFNU) states 94 per centof nurses are suffering from symptoms of burnout and 45 per centof nurses are experiencing severe burnout, which isup from the 29 per cent pre-pandemic.

CFNUsaidthere were more than34,000 nursing vacancies (excluding nurse practitioners) and 126,000 health-care and social assistance sector vacancies an all-time high in the fourth quarter of 2021. That's an increase of133 per cent in two years.

An empty crosswalk in front of a hospital building on a clear day.
The Ottawa Hospital's Civic campus is seen on Oct. 19, 2022. (Nicole Beswitherick/CBC)

New nurses leave within first 2 years

According to Chris McGarvey, organizer of the Canadian Nurses Foundation, and SylvainBrousseau, president of the Canadian Nurses Association, Canada loses anywhere from one-third to two-thirds of newly-graduated nurses within the first two years of entering the profession.

Brousseau saidthis is because of aggression and violence nurses face while on the clock. He said nurses do not receive enough support with their mental health.

"We see some reducing personal self concept and self confidence of the new grads," saidBrousseau.

He added that all studies in the last 30 years have shown that when you have a lack of support, you have no structure.

"You need to optimize the nursing workforce [and] support continuing nursing education," he said.

Workload too heavy

Dr. Claudette Holloway, the president of the Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario (RNAO), said nurses and student nursesare finding the workload too heavy.

"[Ontario] came into the pandemic 22,000nurses short, way beyond other provinces," said Holloway.

Holloway also said nurses arenot receiving enough support and they want more control over their hours. She blames Bill 124 in Ontario for causing anexodus of nurses.

"[The bill] drastically affects [the nursing crisis] across the province," Holloway stated.

Bill 124 was a law passed in 2019, which limits wage increases to one per cent per year for Ontario Public Service employees, including nurses. Holloway saidnurses have been petitioning the provincial government to repeal it.

"Nurses are human beings. We've seen politicians call them heroes. We're not heroes. We're human beings. We have feelings, we need to be valued," said Holloway.