Manitoba spent $3.9M in 1 year on private nurses to fill shortages in Winnipeg, Opposition NDP says - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba spent $3.9M in 1 year on private nurses to fill shortages in Winnipeg, Opposition NDP says

Manitoba's Opposition NDP is calling on the governing Tories to spend more money on the public health-care system so private agencies are not necessaryto fillthe province's health-care gaps.

Agency nursing spend dropping after province announced $200-million to recruit, retain staff: WRHA

A nurse, in a yellow gown and red and white cap, adjusts IV cords
Manitoba's PC government should be reversing the damage done by years of cuts to health care but instead "they are making things worse by spending millions of dollars on private for-profit agency nurses," the Opposition NDP health critic says. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Manitoba's Opposition NDP is calling on the governing Tories to spend more money on the public health-care system so private agencies are not necessaryto fillthe province's health-care gaps.

On Friday, health critic Uzoma Asagwara released datafrom a freedom of information request that shows theWinnipeg Regional Health Authorityspent more than $3.9 million on fees to private nursing agencies to beef up staffingin major hospitalsfrom September 2021 to November 2022.

"To be clear, that is just in Winnipeg alone," Asagwara told reporters at the base of the Manitoba legislative building's grand staircase.

Spending washighest at Seven Oaks Hospital at $1.2 million for the year, whileSt. Boniface Hospital and the Grace Hospital each spent around $810,000. The data did not includeexpenses for theHealth Sciences Centre.

Agency spend starting to fall: WRHA

When looking at fiscal years, the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority appears on track to spend less moneyon agency nurses in the 2022-23 fiscal year than the year prior.

The year-to-date spend in the current fiscal year is $3,277,681, compared to more than $4.1 million in 2021-22.

The WRHA credited the province's $200 million health-care human resources plan, announced lastNovember, with reducing the need for agency nurses. The plan includesfinancial incentivesfor nurses who choose to work full-time and those who work weekends.

Asagwara, however, hascriticized that plan as being short on details and target dates and being "too little, too late."

The priority in repairing the system must be on re-examining "the overall package of what can be provided to nurses," the NDP's health criticsaid.

That includes offering a healthy work-life balance so people can go home at the end of their shifts, be with their families, and have time to recover from the busy work day, they said.

As well, financially, nurses need to feel like they are valued, they said. "And that's been absent under this government for many years."

The Progressive Conservative government should be reversing the damage it hasdone to health care but instead "they are making things worse by spending millions of dollars on private for-profit agency nurses," Asagwara said.

Two people stand behind a podium and face the camera. One, at left, wears a blue collared shirt and blue suit jacket and has black hair. The one at right is in a blue pin-striped suit, a collared shirt and tie, with long black hair pulled back.
NDP Health Critic Uzoma Asagwara, left, and party Leader Wab Kinew, speak to reporters at the legislative building on Friday. (Travis Golby/CBC)

"It shouldn't be this hard to recruit and to retain nurses in our public health-care system.It's clear the PCs are not making the appropriate efforts to address this issue, this crisis, and quite frankly, it's clear they just don't know how to fix the problem they've created."

Manitoba's health-care system hasexperienced high turnover rates since the pandemic started, driven in large part by exhausted nurses facing14- to 16-hour shifts.

Health Minister Audrey Gordonsaid shewould provide an update next week on the $200-million recruitment-and-retention plan.

"There will be a lot of exciting news to share,"shesaid.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story misattributed a quote by Health Minister Audrey Gordon. The health minister said shewould provide an update next week on the $200-million recruitment-and-retention plan for nurses, not NDP health critic Uzoma Asagwara.
    Feb 04, 2023 12:24 PM CT