Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. offers incentives for health-care workers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Sep, 2021 04:07 PM
  • B.C. offers incentives for health-care workers

The British Columbia government is offering nurses and other health-care professionals incentives like child care and support for housing and travel as part of a recruitment drive in the northern region.

Health Minister Adrian Dix says the aim is to get more health-care workers to move to the north and stay there as many parts of the country experience a shortage of nurses in particular.

However, he did not provide a timeline for when some of the programs would be launched, including one offering virtual visits with doctors and other health-care professionals in rural communities.

Dix says workforce challenges have been exacerbated in the northern health region as it deals with the highest number of COVID-19 cases per capita in the province, but recruitment has traditionally been more difficult there.

He says the province's first priority is to ensure all health-care workers get vaccinated against COVID-19 as part of a mandatory requirement starting Oct. 26 in order to prevent outbreaks in health-care facilities that would then have more staffing shortages.

Dix says the government will be working with the nurses union as well as the provincial association of doctors and groups representing other health-care workers.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Canadian mission in Kabul has ended

Canadian mission in Kabul has ended
Canada's military mission in Afghanistan ended Thursday, leaving an unknown number of Canadians and their families trapped just hours before suicide bombers staged a "complex attack" on crowds at the airport in Kabul, killing more than a dozen U.S. soldiers and nearly 100 local Afghans.

Canadian mission in Kabul has ended

Group of LTC operators to mandate COVID vaccines

Group of LTC operators to mandate COVID vaccines
The group says employees who aren’t fully vaccinated as of Oct. 12 will be placed on unpaid leave of absence. Vaccination will also be required for new hires, students and other personnel working with the companies.

Group of LTC operators to mandate COVID vaccines

Afghanistan, pandemic cast a shadow over campaign

Afghanistan, pandemic cast a shadow over campaign
Party leaders hit the road last week just as the fourth wave began to surge and Kabul fell to the Taliban, prompting a desperate push to ramp up evacuation efforts for Canadian expats and former Afghan support staff at the capital's airport. That effort ended early Thursday morning.

Afghanistan, pandemic cast a shadow over campaign

Number of wildfires in B.C. falls below 250

Number of wildfires in B.C. falls below 250
The BC Wildfire Service says some of the major blazes — such as White Rock Lake, Tremont Creek and Lytton Creek — were still classified as out of control.

Number of wildfires in B.C. falls below 250

Party leaders talk affordability in B.C., Ontario

Party leaders talk affordability in B.C., Ontario
That is particularly the case for a housing market made ever hotter by the pandemic that drove more Canadians to want bigger homes and bigger yards. For younger Canadians, and those with lower incomes the pre-pandemic pipe dream of home ownership was pushed even further out of reach.

Party leaders talk affordability in B.C., Ontario

698 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

698 COVID19 cases for Wednesday
There are 5,356 active cases of COVID-19 in the province and 154,669 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 139 individuals are in hospital and 75 are in intensive care. 

698 COVID19 cases for Wednesday