Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

‘We won’t go back’: Manitoba to proceed with Seven Oaks Hospital transition

Despite calls from the nurses union to hold back on health care changes, Manitoba's government will proceed anyway – Jun 11, 2019

A new report on Manitoba’s health care system says overall confidence and morale is declining among Winnipeg nurses.

Story continues below advertisement

The author of the report, hired by the province as a private consultant, is Dr. David Peachey.

He was asked to review changes made so far to Winnipeg’s hospitals as part of phase two of the Pallister government’s health care overhaul.

Peachey says the conversion of Seven Oaks Hospital’s Emergency room to an Urgent Care Centre, which is scheduled for September, should proceed, but that a pause is needed on other phase two changes.

“I personally would like to see the Seven Oaks changes delayed. I would like to see them put a pause on this entire transformation to stop and sort out the issues we have,” says Darlene Jackson, president of the Manitoba Nurses Union.

Despite the report, Manitoba’s health minister, Cameron Friesen, says the changes at Seven Oaks will proceed as planned.

Story continues below advertisement

“They said that we should go back and unwind everything. We won’t go back,” said Friesen at a news conference on Monday.

WATCH: Transcona residents ‘relieved’ over health care transformation at Concordia Hospital 

Earlier this month, Concordia Hospital’s ER was replaced with an Urgent Care Centre, despite pushback from the Manitoba Nurses Union.

Story continues below advertisement

“We realize that in many cases, this has meant disruption for nurses — but not only for nurses,” Friesen said. “So we had 17 nurses meet with David Peachey. They expressed they are in need of sustainable conditions in the work place.”

The nurses’ union says overall workload and increasing overtime hours are factors that need to be addressed before any further changes take place.

“The amount of overtime and the workload that’s related to these changes, staffing, and nursing shortages are very stressful,” Jackson says, “and the fact that you are not able to provide that high-quality care you were educated with and that Manitobans deserve is stressful as well.”

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article