More than 2,000 health-care workers needed over next 5 years, auditor says - Action News
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Saskatchewan

More than 2,000 health-care workers needed over next 5 years, auditor says

The provincial auditor says the Saskatchewan Health Authority needs to find 2,200 workers in hard-to-recruit positions over the next five years.

Auditor says Saskatchewan Health Authority needs continuing care aides, registered nurses, lab techs

Saskatchewan's auditor said the province needs to hire more than 2,000 healthcare workers including 520 registered nurses in the next five years. (Getty Images)

The provincial auditor says the Saskatchewan Health Authority (SHA) needs to find more than 2,000 workers in hard-to-recruit positions over the next five years.

Tara Clemett released part two of her annual report on Tuesday afternoon.

Clemett's office examined a wide array of issues in the report, one area of focus was the SHA's need to find more workers.

She said the SHA has an estimated 2,200 staff shortages over the next five years in these hard-to-recruit positions:specifically, 840 continuing care assistants, 520 registered nurses, and 180 medical laboratory technicians.

"To provide Saskatchewan residents with access to health services they need, the authority must anticipate not only the number and type of health-care professionals required to provide those services but also where those positions are needed most," Clemett said.

"Knowing where in the province these gaps exist helps in implementing appropriate strategies to recruit and especially to retain staff as it can be difficult to staff facilities in rural and remote areas, particularly in the north."

In September, the Saskatchewan government released its Health and Human Resource Plan detailing how it would hire and retain health-care workers.

The $60-million initiative aims to bring about 1,000 more physicians, nurses and other health care support staff to fill vacancies across the province.

Last week, Health Minister Paul Merriman was in the Philippines on a recruitment trip. The government plans to hire 150 health-care workers from that country. Merriman said last month 70 nurses were ready to work in the province over the next few months.

Plan needed sooner

Clemett said she was pleased with the plan but said it should have been created sooner.

"The [SHA]formed in 2017. It is a little bit worrisome that it took them this long to have a formal health human resource plan. It is something I would have envisioned you had sooner once you had centralized and become an authority."

Clemett said the "status quo" and the health recruitment and retention plan announced in September still fall short of the 400 health-care workers needed per year over the next five years in hard-to-recruit positions.

The report found in 202122 thatthe SHA had"3,500 new hires and over 4,100 terminations (both voluntary and involuntary)."

As ofMarch 31, 2022, the SHA had a vacancy rate of 5.1 per cent. The auditor said that amounts to "about 2,000 staff positions were unfilled overall."

The report says training more nurses will not have an immediate impact and "retaining existing staff is needed to help the authority address staffing shortages in the short-term," the report said.

"I think the focus can't just be getting more new people into Saskatchewan. It's about retaining the current workforce the authority has as well," Clemett said.

She mentioned moving casual staff into permanent positions and recommended the SHA do regular staff exit interviews and review those results.

The report says a recent survey found 66 per cent of SHA staff felt burned out from their work.

"They've done their first ever staff engagement culture survey. The results weren't that good," Clemett said.

She said the SHA needs to look at "root causes" of why staff leave and why they do not stay in rural areas. She said that would need to be followed by actions to address those issues.

Clemett said identifying which facilities need the most staff is a start.

"At the end of the day, they didn't have a good analysis to tell me which facilities in this province have the most significant gaps."

Provincial Auditor Tara Clemett said the SHA strategy to get more healthcare workers into the province should also focus on keeping existing workers. (Richard Agecoutay/CBC)

The auditor's report found the SHA's staffing gap analysis "does not specifically identify which facilities or locations in the province will experience the largest shortages; our analysis found the Authority expects to need 700 staff alone in Prince Albert, Meadow Lake and La Ronge over the next five years."

Clemett said looking at the SHA's website and seeing where service disruptions existprovides a clue.

She said the SHA should look at providing things including childcare and spousal employment to entice workers to rural and remote areas.

Clemett recommended the SHA establish a First Nations and Mtis recruitment and retention plan. She said this could help fill gaps in northern Saskatchewan.

Province working on bringing in more health-care staff

Following question period on Tuesday, Health Minister Paul Merriman said he accepted the auditor's recommendations.

He said he wanted to look at a breakdown of the auditor'snumbers and compare them with what the government's projection is for workers needed over the next five years.

"There is a lot more work to do on this plan, but you're starting to see the benefits of the dollars we provided back at budget time and the plan that was unveiled beginning of September."

Merriman mentioned the government has hired 130 doctors for a net gain of 70 over those that have retired or left the province compared with a year ago.

He also said the trip to the Philippines went "extremely well," with 129 job offers made to nurses there.

Merriman said there are staffing needs in the cities but he said if rural communities do not have sufficient staffing, patients end up in the city and overload the system.

"We need to stabilize rural Saskatchewan, that's our primary focus."

with files from CBC Saskatchewan