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Cancer Patients Support Premiers Call for Long Overdue Increase to Canada Health Transfer

Cancer Patients Support Premiers Call for Long Overdue Increase to Canada Health Transfer
newswire.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newswire.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

One year later, nurses exhausted and angry

Winnipeg Free Press By: Linda Silas and Darlene Jackson Posted: Opinion As we approach the March 11 anniversary of the World Health Organization declaring COVID-19 a global pandemic, nurses across Canada are at their breaking point. We are exhausted, burned out – and angry. Nurses are on the front lines of the pandemic and our health-care system every day. We see its problems in brutal detail and we have the experience to know what’s needed. We have repeatedly called on decision-makers to address critical staffing shortages and provide basic protections to keep workers safe. We continue to be disregarded, and the result has been devastating.

Take Care: Pandemic is Sask s best chance for change in long-term care

Take Care: Pandemic is Sask. s best chance for change in long-term care “But after the pandemic finally goes away is everything going to just go back to the way it always was?” Author of the article: Arthur White-Crummey Publishing date: Mar 06, 2021  •  March 6, 2021  •  11 minute read  •  Top from L to R: Rob Coleman looks at his mother-in-law Joan Moore outside of Extendicare Parkside care home in December 2020 after Joan tested positive for COVID-19. MICHAEL BELL / Regina Leader-Post; Beverley Hartnell, left, stands with her father Bernard Hartnell, a Santa Maria resident who died after testing positive for COVID-19. (Photo courtesy of Beverley Hartnell); Everett Hindley, Saskatchewan minister of mental health and addictions, BRANDON HARDER/ Regina Leader-Post. Bottom L to R: Pam Moore poses for a photo on March 1, 2021 at Extendicare Parkside. MICHAEL BELL / Regina Leader-Post; A sign declaring a COVID-19 outbreak hangs on the door at the Luther Speci

Take Care: Pandemic is SK s best chance for change in long-term care

Take Care: Pandemic is Sask. s best chance for change in long-term care “But after the pandemic finally goes away is everything going to just go back to the way it always was?” Author of the article: Arthur White-Crummey, Lynn Giesbrecht Publishing date: Mar 06, 2021  •  March 6, 2021  •  11 minute read  •  Top from L to R: Rob Coleman looks at his mother-in-law Joan Moore outside of Extendicare Parkside care home in December 2020 after Joan tested positive for COVID-19. MICHAEL BELL / Regina Leader-Post; Beverley Hartnell, left, stands with her father Bernard Hartnell, a Santa Maria resident who died after testing positive for COVID-19. (Photo courtesy of Beverley Hartnell); Everett Hindley, Saskatchewan minister of mental health and addictions, BRANDON HARDER/ Regina Leader-Post. Bottom L to R: Pam Moore poses for a photo on March 1, 2021 at Extendicare Parkside. MICHAEL BELL / Regina Leader-Post; A sign declaring a COVID-19 outbreak hangs on the door at

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