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HSN workers rallying Tuesday to call for a stop to cuts

Hospital at 110 per cent capacity 
hsn
Health Sciences North frontline staff will be holding a rally on Tuesday, Nov. 6, calling for a stop to cuts at the hospital. (File)

Health Sciences North frontline staff will be holding a rally at noon on Tuesday, Nov. 6 in front of the Paris Street entrance at HSN, calling for a stop to cuts at the hospital.

Staff are also teaming up with the Ontario Health Coalition (OHC) for community forum on Monday, Nov. 12, at 6 p.m. at the Steelworkers Hall (66 Brady St.).

Should the cuts to more than 100 full-time equivalent positions proceed, “patients will be left with less staff to assist them and provide care. And the staff who remain will be scrambling with additional duties on top of their already heavy workloads trying to provide care to a higher number of patients,” said Sharon Richer, secretary-treasurer of the Ontario Council of Hospital Unions (OCHU), a Sudbury resident and former staff at HSN.  

In Ontario, OCHU is the hospital division of the Canadian Union of Public of Employees (CUPE) which represents about 40,000 hospital staff province-wide.

On Oct. 23, a busload of HSN staff, represented by CUPE 1623, travelled to Toronto where they joined 8,000 people from across Ontario for an OHC-organized, broad community rally calling on the new PC government to rebuild and enhance, not privatize health care.

Tuesday's "stop the cuts rally" at HSN is the second such community mobilizing event at the hospital calling for the recent staffing cuts to be rescinded, to ensure patient care and safety is maintained.

“Keeping the hospital environment clean and infection-free is a tremendous challenge. During the high patient surge periods, and with the consistent overcrowding at the occupancy levels we’ve seen at the hospital in recent years, it is backbreaking for staff to keep pace to prevent transmission of MRSA and other superbugs,” said Richer. 

Research shows that, as occupancy rates exceed 85 per cent, the risk of infectious outbreaks and the incidence of medical errors increase, and the ability of hospitals to match the demand for in-patient care with available beds diminishes rapidly. 

HSN is facing a deficit in the millions of dollars and is cutting more than 100 staff. 

Provincial hospital funding per capita is 28.3 per higher in the rest of Canada than in Ontario — $404.09 more per person per year. The cost of an average stay at HSN is $4,974 compared to $5,360 in Ontario and $5,992 in Canada.

In the last two years, rarely has HSN been below 100 per cent capacity. Bed overcrowding is a constant occurrence and that is outside the extra flu and seasonal patient surges. 

In the last few weeks, HSN has operated at an average of 110 per cent capacity.


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