Vacancy rates for some western Manitoba health-care positions exceed 15% - Action News
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Manitoba

Vacancy rates for some western Manitoba health-care positions exceed 15%

The number of nursing, home care aide and health care aide positions sitting vacant in western Manitoba exceeds15 per cent, a new document shows.

Percentage of unfilled jobs at Prairie Mountain Health rising in some positions, documents show

A number of Prairie Mountain Health positions are seeing job vacancy rates higher than 15 per cent. (Riley Laychuk/CBC)

The number of nursing, home-care aide and health-care aide positions sitting vacant in western Manitoba exceeds15 per cent, a new document shows.

The Manitoba New Democrats pounced during question period Thursday on vacancy numbers the partyobtained from Prairie Mountain Health through freedom of information legislation.

The statistics show that 22per cent of licensed practical nurse positions wereopen as of August, as well 19 per cent of registered nursing positionsand 16 per cent of nurse practitioners jobs.

Within individual facilities, the vacancy rates for each position can fluctuate wildly, as some small-townfacilities with few employees canskewthe average by having some vacancies, or none at all.

Still, the NDPcalledthe overall vacancy ratesworrisome.

Leader Wab Kinewnoted the Dauphin Health Centre hada vacancy rate among registered nurses of 31 per cent, which equates to 32 job openings as of August,while the community's personal care homehas 60 per cent of positions, or three of five jobs, empty.

A 'clear trend,' NDP alleges

"This is not an aberration, this is not an outlier," Kinew told question period. "This is a clear trend, documented in the evidence, of this governmentcutting health-care services that results in fewer peopleworking at the bedside and helping our seniors."

Premier Brian Pallister said in response thatManitoba has 1,100 more nurses working now than a year ago.

He saidhis government has trimmed top-heavy management and re-directed funding toward the front-lines.

"The reality is that we are achieving better results," Pallister said.

Roblin and District Health Centre has gone without its emergency department since September, but health officials have stressed that it isn't permanent. (Google Street View)

Staffing shortages at rural Manitoba health-care facilities havebeen a persistentproblem, resulting in the closures ofemergency rooms ranging from Vita to Erickson and Shoal Lake, dating back years. More recently, Roblin's ER was shut down, but health officials have stressed the closure isn't permanent.

The NDP alleged on Thursday, however, that the staff crunch is getting worse.

The party highlighted that the vacancy rate for clinical (allied) positions, which includes lab technicians, hit 25 per cent in August, which is 10 per cent higher than the spring of 2019.

As well, more health care aide positions (16 per cent) are vacant as of August than a year ago.

In one example, Brandon's hospital the region's largest went from a nearly 8 per cent vacancy rate in health-care aides in March 2019 (13 vacancies) to 14 per cent this August (25 vacancies).

Across the health authority, average vacancy rates were lower in other positions, including registered psychiatric nurses (sixper cent) and pharmacy (14 per cent).

Prairie Mountain Health chief executive officer Penny Gilsonsaid in a statement Friday the health authority is cognizant of its vacancy rates and working extremely hard to fill these positions.

"We know it's challenging to recruit to rural areas," she said, noting thatcommunities, economic development departments and chambers of commercegroupsshoulder the recruitment demands as well.

"Often, you are recruiting to fill a specific position in health care, and the person's spouse/significant other is also looking for a job."

Health Minister Cameron Friesen previously said that eight per cent is considered a normal vacancy rate for nurses.