Registered nurses (RN) and nurse practitioners (NP) are an essential part of Ontario’s health-care system. One that should be: accessible, equitable, person-centered, and integrated. And yet, the province has the worst RN-to-population ratio in Canada. Chronic underfunding and understaffing across all health sectors and the relentless replacement of RNs and NPs with less qualified health-care workers is challenging the effectiveness of RNs and NPs and the system as a whole. Source: rnao.ca
It comes as no surprise that almost 70 % of registered practical nurses in Ontario say they can’t provide adequate care for patients due to insufficient time and resources, and nearly one in two considering leaving the profession a new survey suggests. With the top reasons for leaving the field include inadequate wages, overbearing workload and compensation practices that nurses feel are unfair. Source: Global News.ca
The Government needs to address nurses’ worsening state by repealing Bill 124, which currently caps nurses’ wage increases to a maximum of one per cent total compensation for three years. They also need to address unsafe workloads, by hiring more full-time RPN’s, and to ensure RPN voices are included in policy making.
Nurses are the foundational constituents of health care, whether they provide services in the community or in hospitals. Our policymakers must disillusion themselves with the idea that Ontario’s health care crisis can be solved without consulting and supporting nurses. Source: healthtopics.com

