Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Anti-violence program for B.C. health-care workers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Oct, 2022 01:04 PM
  • Anti-violence program for B.C. health-care workers

VANCOUVER - The B.C. government has announced a program to help reduce violence against health-care workers at 26 hospitals and mental health facilities across the province.

Health Minister Adrian Dix says 320 protection service officers and 14 people tasked with preventing violence will be hired to enhance the safety of nurses and other health-care staff as well as patients and the public.

He says that since the summer of 2021, over 4,400 reported incidents of violence have occurred, resulting in about $7 million in employee time-loss claims, but the impact on workers can't be quantified in dollars.

The BC Nurses Union has been calling for better protective measures for its members for at least 30 years.

Its president, Aman Grewal, says nurses are punched, kicked, grabbed and verbally and sexually harassed at increasingly dangerous workplaces, where injury rates are under-reported and higher than those affecting first responders.

Grewal says the stress and fear at work has been compounded due to staffing shortages as people lash out at nurses for everything from long wait-lists to cancelled surgeries.

MORE National ARTICLES

More staff needed to ease border delays: union

More staff needed to ease border delays: union
Weber spoke at a House of Commons committee meeting looking at the ArriveCan app, which has been used for providing travel and public health information before and after people enter Canada. The cabinet order mandating vaccine requirements and use of ArriveCan for incoming travellers expires at the end of Friday and the government says it will not be renewed.

More staff needed to ease border delays: union

B.C. seniors stage rally, seeking park for elders

B.C. seniors stage rally, seeking park for elders
About 100 seniors, many using walkers and motorized scooters and carrying placards, took part in the protest near the land owned by the Greater Victoria School District, and say they are being shut out of green space near their homes.

B.C. seniors stage rally, seeking park for elders

BC Liberals looking to rebrand with a top choice for party name vote

BC Liberals looking to rebrand with a top choice for party name vote
As part of this process, every BC Liberal member will have the opportunity before the end of the year to vote in favour of changing the name to BC United or keep the existing BC Liberal Party name. In the meantime, BC United has been registered with Elections BC as an alternate name for the BC Liberal Party. 

BC Liberals looking to rebrand with a top choice for party name vote

B.C. senior convicted of 11 counts of sex assault

B.C. senior convicted of 11 counts of sex assault
Coquitlam resident Raymond Gaglardi appeared in B.C. Supreme Court in New Westminster on Monday, and court records show he was convicted on 11 counts. The charges related to historical sexual assaults of young men or teenage boys who attended several Coquitlam-area churches between 1993 and 2007.  

B.C. senior convicted of 11 counts of sex assault

Daily heat records set in many areas of B.C.

Daily heat records set in many areas of B.C.
Environment Canada says a preliminary review of daily maximum temperatures shows records were set in areas from the south and central coasts to the central Interior and northeastern sections of B.C.

Daily heat records set in many areas of B.C.

Weekend shooting in the Guildford area of Surrey lands man in hospital

Weekend shooting in the Guildford area of Surrey lands man in hospital
At approximately midnight on Sunday, Surrey RCMP responded to a report of shots fired in the 16200 block of 80thAvenue. A male suffering from injuries was transported to a local hospital with serious injuries.

Weekend shooting in the Guildford area of Surrey lands man in hospital