COVID-19 surge forces transfer of Manitoba patients to Ontario winnipegfreepress.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from winnipegfreepress.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Winnipeg Free Press
Stefanson responds to criticism about absence of life-and-death protocol By: Carol Sanders and Kevin Rollason | Posted: 7:00 PM CDT Tuesday, May. 18, 2021 Save to Read Later
Health Minister Heather Stefanson says the province can expand to 170 ICU beds and shouldn t need a triage protocol to decide who gets a bed and who doesn t.
Winnipeg Free Press
If one is required, there s an ethical framework doctors can use, she said. The ethical framework was put in place to ensure that in the event that a triage protocol is needed, it is there to help doctors put that in place, Stefanson told reporters after question period Tuesday.
Winnipeg Free Press By: Editorial | Posted: 7:00 PM CDT Tuesday, May. 18, 2021
Knowledge is power.
Anyone who grasps the veracity of this ageless snippet of wisdom also no doubt understands there are at least a couple of ways in which information can empower. The first, more direct method is simply by acquiring knowledge by learning, thereby gaining a greater understanding and an enhanced ability to turn knowledge into action that produces positive results.
The second and decidedly more backhanded strategy relies less on gaining knowledge oneself and more on denying information to others the obvious conclusion being that if one’s perceived opponents are kept figuratively in the dark, that information deficit will create advantages and opportunities for the more informed adversary to hold sway in a given situation.
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Winnipeg Free Press
Kitigay to plant grows jobs, hope at Brokenhead
Last Modified: 8:38 AM CDT Monday, May. 17, 2021 | Updates Save to Read Later
Brokenhead Chief Deborah Smith in her office on the First Nation, which is north of Winnipeg, on the shore of Lake Winnipeg. Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press
Near the shore of Lake Winnipeg, where wild rice once grew, sits a plot of land with huge potential on Brokenhead First Nation.
Near the shore of Lake Winnipeg, where wild rice once grew, sits a plot of land with huge potential on Brokenhead First Nation.
Nitrogen and phosphorus-rich fish bones have been mixed into the earth, preparing the soil for cultural, economic and social growth through a collaborative program with the University of Manitoba.