Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. nurses agreement has nurse-to-patient ratio

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Apr, 2023 03:04 PM
  • B.C. nurses agreement has nurse-to-patient ratio

VICTORIA - British Columbia will become the first Canadian province to adopt a nurse-to-patient ratio as part of its plan to improve workload standards in public health.

The move is a key plank in the tentative contract reached between the province and the Nurses Bargaining Association last week.

Health Minister Adrian Dix says setting a nurse-to-patient ratio is "the leading international practice" for retaining nurses and delivering quality health care.

Dix says the government will also work with the B.C. Nurses' Union on a "national and international" recruitment plan, backed by $750 million in new funding over the next three years.

Premier David Eby says the new nurse-to-patient model will transform the way people are cared for and allow nurses to do what they do best.

Nurses union president Aman Grewal says the change will not only help a strained and understaffed health-care system retain nurses, but will also improve patient outcomes.

The 48,000 members of the B.C. Nurses' Union will start to vote on the new agreement on April 20.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Murder of a Kamloops man associated to bloody Ikea rug

Murder of a Kamloops man associated to bloody Ikea rug
Peter Casimir is known to have also used the alias of Jake Maserski. Investigators continue to seek any additional information the public may have with respect to knowledge of the Ikea area rug and its origin.

Murder of a Kamloops man associated to bloody Ikea rug

UBC encourages students to uninstall TikTok

UBC encourages students to uninstall TikTok
The school says in a statement issued last week that the app is one of UBC’s fastest-growing social media platforms, used by students, staff and faculty for entertainment, research, outreach and recruitment.    

UBC encourages students to uninstall TikTok

Egyptian asylum seekers decry CBSA 'Islamophobia'

Egyptian asylum seekers decry CBSA 'Islamophobia'
Five families from Egypt claim the CBSA's actions are fuelled by "Islamophobia" and information provided by the Egyptian government, which is leading Canada to withhold protection and causing severe "distress and trauma."

Egyptian asylum seekers decry CBSA 'Islamophobia'

Indian police identify migrant Akwesasne victims

Indian police identify migrant Akwesasne victims
Achal Tyagi, superintendent of police for the city of Mehsana, in the western state of Gujarat, told The Canadian Press that the four deceased Indians were members of the Chaudhari family. They included the father, Praveenbhai Chaudhari, 50; mother, Dakshaben, 45; son, Meet, 20; and 23-year-old daughter, Vidhi.

Indian police identify migrant Akwesasne victims

New medical standards aim to manage kids' pain

New medical standards aim to manage kids' pain
It's the first national standard in the world focused on pediatric pain. Emergency physician and pediatric pain researcher Dr. Samina Ali says for a long time, doctors believed young children's nervous systems were so underdeveloped they couldn't feel or remember pain.

New medical standards aim to manage kids' pain

Man's throat slashed on Surrey, B.C., bus: police

Man's throat slashed on Surrey, B.C., bus: police
Court documents show that Abdul Aziz Kawam, born in 1995, faces four counts of committing an offence "for the benefit of a terrorist group" linked to the attack on Saturday. The terror charges carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

Man's throat slashed on Surrey, B.C., bus: police