Nurse in Sudbury, Ont., resigns after 40-year career because she felt 'very unsafe'
CBC
Wendy McNeil dedicated 40 years of her life to nursing.
On Dec. 12, she left her job as a critical care nurse at Sudbury's Health Sciences North in northern Ontario.
"I resigned my position because I felt very unsafe and unable to give the quality of care, and to actually give the bare minimum standard of care to the patients that I was entrusted to take care of," McNeil said in an interview.
McNeil said the COVID-19 pandemic has put added pressure on a health-care system that's already under-resourced.
In an open letter on her Facebook page, she describes a situation where she and her colleagues had to take on the roles of receptionists, personal-care workers, dietitians, physiotherapists, social workers and even spiritual workers on top of their regular duties.
McNeil said many of her young colleagues have gone back to school and have no plans of returning to the profession.
"I remember being six years old and knowing that I was going to be a nurse," she said. "So to have that part of your life feel like it's being ripped away, that's how it feels like to me — like a Band-Aid that's being ripped off."
The Ontario Nurses' Association has said there are 20,000 nursing vacancies in the province.
McNeil has worked in Sudbury, Timmins and Alberta, and said the systemic issues she witnessed in Sudbury are present across Canada.
She said health-care resources are further strained by an aging cohort of patients with more than one health issue, along with the opioid epidemic.
"It's not just been the pandemic that has caused a lot of the issues that are happening," McNeil said.
"Yes, the pandemic has really tipped the scale, but this stuff has always been there."
McNeil said successive governments, at both the provincial and federal levels, have failed to properly fund the health-care system and support its workforce.
In an email to CBC News, Anna Miller, a spokesperson for the Ontario Ministry of Health, said the province plans to recruit more than 5,000 registered nurses and registered practical nurses by 2025-26.
P.E.I.'s Public Schools Branch is looking for 50 substitute bus drivers, and it'll be recruiting at three job fairs on Saturday, June 8. The job fairs are located at the Atlantic Superstore in Montague, Royalty Crossing in Charlottetown, and the bus parking lot of Three Oaks Senior High in Summerside. All three run from 9 a.m. until noon. Dave Gillis, the director of transportation and risk management for the Public Schools Branch, said the number of substitute drivers they're hiring isn't unusual. "We are always looking for more. Our drivers tend to have an older demographic," he said.