Healthcare
Measles cases linked to Ont. outbreak
2 minute read Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025WINNIPEG — Public health officials said Tuesday that five confirmed cases of measles in southern Manitoba are connected to an outbreak in Ontario.
All five people live in the same home, and all were in contact with people confirmed to have measles while travelling in Ontario recently.
The five have been asked to isolate at home, a provincial news release said.
As of Jan. 29, 81 cases of measles — 54 confirmed and 27 probable — have been reported in Ontario since 2024.
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Union flags issues with health-care aide hiring practices
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 1, 2025Fixing health care requires more nurses
5 minute read Saturday, Feb. 1, 2025The recent death of Chad Giffin, a 49-year-old man who experienced homelessness, demands our attention, as he had waited eight hours in the Health Science Centre emergency department.
Alongside are concerns about a regional health authority board member’s resignation over “low-balled” health budgets. It is not realistic to think the “fix health care” promise could be kept in the 14 months since the election. However, that is enough time for a clear public plan that explains how we got here, steps to strengthen our public health-care system, and prevent further privatization.
First, how bad is it? Manitoba’s record of the longest ER wait times in Canada is well documented. In the ’90s, patients rarely waited more than two hours. Manitoba’s poor health indicators such as high rates of diabetes, chronic illness and poverty, including the lack of housing affordable to people with low incomes, all place more demands on our system. Emergency departments are expensive shelters.
In addition to these factors, Manitoba has the worst nursing shortage in Canada. The Manitoba Nurses Union (MNU) reports about 13,000 unionized nurses, with 20 per cent, or 2,449 nursing positions, vacant. As MNU president Darlene Jackson has explained, the crisis in access to medical services is largely a crisis in nursing supply.
Opioid calls take toll on Winnipeg first responders
5 minute read Friday, Jan. 31, 2025WINNIPEG — A soaring number of calls and Winnipeg’s toxic drug crisis are putting a “tremendous” strain on firefighters and paramedics, who are forced to confront violence and suffer psychological injuries as a result, union leaders told the Winnipeg Free Press Thursday.
A new Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service report said opioid-related calls jumped by 1,372 per cent from 2016 to 2023.
“The unpredictable nature of these calls, these types of incidents, takes a psychological toll on our members,” United Fire Fighters of Winnipeg president Nick Kasper said.
Ryan Woiden, president of Manitoba Government and General Employees’ Union Local 911, which represents city paramedics, said violence against staff increases when drug-related calls go up.
Doctors pitch winter challenge to improve Manitobans’ health
4 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 31, 2025Strike vote shows ‘profound’ disappointment
4 minute read Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025WINNIPEG — Health support workers are upset they’ve had to vote overwhelmingly to go on strike under an NDP government, little more than a year and a half after doing so under the Tories.
Allied health workers represented by the Manitoba Association of Health Care Professionals have voted 96 per cent in favour of a strike mandate. They voted 99 per cent in favour of a strike mandate in 2023, after working five years without a contract. No strike date has been set.
The union says retention, understaffing, increasing workloads and the lack of competitive wages are some of the main issues in both the current labour negotiations and the earlier ones.
“I think that 96 per cent shows that profound level of disappointment,” union president Jason Linklater said on Wednesday.
Tower taking shape
0 minute read Preview Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025PMH ordered to cut spending on agency nurses
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025A dangerous document that puts lives at risk
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025Personal struggle drives Brandonite to help others
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2025Western Manitobans contend with therapy delays
5 minute read Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025A shortage of occupational therapists in the Prairie Mountain Health (PMH) region has resulted in 746 western Manitobans whose therapy has been delayed while they’re wait listed.
The delays are specifically being experienced by 323 children and 423 adults.
There are also 12 rural health-care facilities in the region that are either without or have limited occupational therapist services, said Kyle Ross, president of the Manitoba Government Employees Union.
“It’s definitely a larger issue in our rural communities,” Ross said. “We hear it a lot from occupational therapy members we represent in the rural areas, that they just don’t have the hands.”
PMH to host medical students under student-led initiative
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Jan. 23, 2025Caring for aging parents with dementia
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025Applications for plastic health cards now open
2 minute read Preview Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025Paramedic shortage creating crisis: PC MLA
6 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2025PMH hires 16 security guards to patrol BRHC
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025LOAD MORE