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Naomi Campbell, Russell Crowe, and patients without enough nurses
The piece also cites data about the working conditions. It says that documented reports by nurses to the Professional Responsibility Committee about unsafe working conditions in Calgary hospitals have risen significantly, apparently more than doubling from the prior year. The article says that officials from the Calgary Health Region "admit more nurses have to be hired and working conditions are stressful, mainly because of the city's population boom." The piece reports that relevant data shows that this Region has 851 nurses per 100,000 people, which is well under the Alberta average of 1,021. The piece might have sought additional comment or data on the extent to which the population boom is the main factor in the relative shortage of nurses in Alberta. The piece might also have briefly explored the effects of this situation in a bit more detail. Nurse short-staffing leads to worse patient outcomes, as research shows. It also drives burned-out nurses away from the bedside, or out of the profession entirely. At the same time, abuse of nurses--the caregivers most likely to be on the front lines when patients and families become unhappy with problems in care--is a significant problem that contributes to nursing burnout and the nursing shortage. We thank the Calgary Herald for this helpful piece. See the article "Calgary nurses blame shortages for abuse" in the November 19, 2006 edition of the Calgary Herald.
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The URL for this page is www.nursingadvocacy.org/news/2006/nov/19_calgary.html |
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