Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 8, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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TOP NEWS
A3 SATURDAY FEBRUARY 8, 2025 ● ASSOCIATE EDITOR, NEWS: STACEY THIDRICKSON 204-697-7292 ● CITY.DESK@FREEPRESS.MB.CA ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
T
HE Kinew government says en-
ticing recent retirees and pri-
vate-agency employees to return
to the public health-care system has
resulted in 1,255 net new hires in hospi-
tals across Manitoba.
Provincial officials boasted about
surpassing a target in the first NDP
budget — a combined 1,000 extra doc-
tors, nurses and other professionals —
on Friday, but critics question whether
there’s been a noticeable impact on
front-line staff or patient care.
“It was a big promise and I’ll be hon-
est, at first, I was a little nervous, but
we knew that we had to be ambitious,
that Manitobans deserve an ambitious
government,” Health Minister Uzoma
Asagwara told reporters gathered for
a news conference at St. Boniface Hos-
pital.
Asagwara credited the hiring suc-
cess during the current fiscal year to
changes that speed up the certification
of internationally educated profes-
sionals, an increase in post-secondary
health-care training program seats
and ensuring all graduates immedi-
ately receive a job offer, among other
initiatives.
Nurses account for 481 of the 1,255
hires — about four in 10 — across
Shared Health, CancerCare Manitoba
and the five regional health authorities.
Those figures include more than 60
people who have come out of retire-
ment and about 219 who left the private
sector for the public system, added
Asagwara, who previously worked as a
psychiatric nurse.
“Where are they?” said Darlene Jack-
son, president of the Manitoba Nurses
Union. “Because nurses are not seeing
the impact of having more nurses in
the system.”
For Jackson, the most telling metrics
are overtime rates, vacancies and the
use of private agencies.
Claims that overtime has dropped
are being paired with reports from
members that their managers aren’t
filling absences and shift teams are
understaffed as a result, she noted.
Jason Linklater, president of the
Manitoba Association of Health Care
Professionals, echoed those comments,
saying there have not been nearly
enough additions — only 14 of whom
are paramedics — to make a signifi-
cant impact.
“There’s a disconnect between the
government’s numbers and what our
members are feeling on the front
lines,” Linklater said in a statement on
the announcement.
”Right now, there are at least 1,000
vacant allied health positions…. (The
province is) not on track to fix health
care.”
Asagwara was joined by Premier
Wab Kinew, St. Boniface chief medi-
cal officer Dr. Kristjan Thompson and
other political and health-care worker
colleagues for the midday event.
Thompson said new staff members
have allowed the facility to increase its
internal medicine and critical-care bed
numbers and offer both endoscopy pro-
cedures and cardiac catheterization
(cath labs) on weekends.
“People still have heart attacks on
Saturdays and Sundays,” he said. “Be-
fore, what we did is we’d have to call
folks in, overtime.”
The ER physician said extra hours
— as well as moral distress, vicari-
ous trauma and verbal, emotional and
physical abuse — are contributing to
high levels of burnout.
Thompson celebrated the hiring mile-
stone, as well as new enhancements to
security in hospitals being made to
support him and his colleagues.
“Our healers need healing, too,” he
added.
Progressive Conservative health
critic Kathleen Cook said she’s curi-
ous about how the province will reach
its goal of recruiting 90 paramedics
before the end of the fiscal year and
which internal government numbers
can back the assertion that mandatory
overtime is dropping.
“While new hires are great and need-
ed, we also need to focus on keeping
the health-care workers in the system
that we do have already,” the Roblin
MLA said.
She noted the province highlighted
some Tory initiatives, such as the in-
crease in medical school class sizes
and the creation of the nursing float
pool, for its hiring successes.
Also Friday, the province issued an
update on its efforts to appoint more se-
curity officers to monitor health-care
facilities and install permanent weap-
ons scanners on the Health Sciences
Centre campus.
The latter project, which involves the
adult and children’s ERs and Crisis Re-
sponse Centre, is anticipated to be com-
plete by Feb. 13.
“I’ve been hit. I’ve had things thrown
at me; no weapons have been pulled on
me, but I’ve seen them when we’ve had
to help a patient in a bed, there’s been
a knife in their pocket or a machete.
There’s a huge impact, mentally,” said
Belinda Wong, a veteran health-care
aide at HSC.
Wong cited violent incidents as the
reason she left her job in the HSC
emergency room in 2019.
Members of the public are encour-
aged to use free “amnesty lockers” to
store personal items, including contra-
band, during a visit to the site. In her
experience, few people take up the of-
fer, said Wong, now an employee of the
HSC Pain Clinic.
Among recent high-profile incidents,
a concealed weapon was found on a
person acting suspiciously in the chil-
dren’s ER in the fall and an HSC secu-
rity guard was stabbed by a patient last
winter.
Margaret Schroeder, president of
Canadian Union of Public Employees
Local 204, said her members have been
asking for scanners and an increased
security presence “for a very long
time.”
Support services staff are hopeful
scanners will be installed at more hos-
pitals, Schroeder said.
Jackson said nurses want stronger
legislation in place to deter criminals
from attacking health-care workers on
the job.
As far as she’s concerned, anyone
who assaults a nurse should face the
same consequences as people who are
convicted of striking a police officer.
Sixty-six per cent of HSC nurses
who participated in a November 2024
“Grade Your Government” survey indi-
cated they had seen some improvement
in their employer’s efforts to keep them
safe while arriving to and leaving from
work over the last year.
However, only 36 per cent of these
employees disclosed to their union
that they had noticed a positive change
in their employer’s efforts to address
violence and verbal abuse on the job
during the same period.
maggie.macintosh@freepress.mb.ca
MAGGIE MACINTOSH
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara announces the province has surpassed an ‘ambitious’ budget target, Friday at St. Boniface Hospital.
By the numbers
Net new health-care workers, hired
between April 1 and Dec. 31, 2024
Nurses: 481
Health-care aides: 386
Allied health workers in diagnostics
and other areas: 162
Physicians: 138
Residents: 39
Physician assistants and clinical
assistants: 28
Emergency responders: 14
Midwives: 7
— Manitoba Health
New HSC weapons scanner
A Canadian artificial intelligence company has
won a bid to provide weapons detectors to the
province’s largest hospital.
Toronto-based Xtract One Technologies was con-
tracted to install scanners at various Health Sci-
ences Centre entrances, the company announced
in a news release Friday. The release states the
equipment “unobtrusively” scans people and their
items for “potential mass casualty weapons” while
distinguishing these threats from tablets, keys
and other harmless objects that enter a facility.
“Health-care environments today face two
security challenges: providing top-tier security
while ensuring that both patients and caregivers
feel safe and comfortable,” Peter Evans, CEO of
Xtract One, said in a statement.
“This is a trend we’re seeing across the health-
care sector, where providers are actively looking
for solutions to these growing challenges, and we
welcome the opportunity to play a role in securing
health facility environments.”
HSC’s adult and children’s emergency depart-
ments and Crisis Response Centre will be equipped
with the devices.
Manitoba’s health minister said a total of 96
institutional safety officers have been trained and
assigned to various health-care facilities since last
spring to bolster security. The target for a “full
complement” is 126. HSC is home to the largest
roster, with 42 appointees at present. Victoria
General Hospital, Brandon Regional Health Centre
and St. Boniface Hospital each have 16 officers.
The remaining six are stationed at Selkirk Mental
Health Centre.
— Scott Billeck
Unions left wondering where they all are
NDP trumpets
1,255 net new
health workers
;