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ONA campaigns to stop local RN cuts

It may be National Nursing Week 2010 — a week to celebrate the contribution of dedicated nurses across the country — but it’s also the day that the Ontario Nurses’ Association (ONA) is launching its Cutting Nurses, Cutting Care campaign.
It may be National Nursing Week 2010 — a week to celebrate the contribution of dedicated nurses across the country — but it’s also the day that the Ontario Nurses’ Association (ONA) is launching its Cutting Nurses, Cutting Care campaign.

Beginning today, Sudbury residents will notice new transit shelter ads designed to raise public awareness about RN cuts that affect their health care.

“Nursing Week is a time to recognize the invaluable contribution RNs make to the health-care system,” notes ONA President Linda Haslam-Stroud, RN. “But in Sudbury, our skilled, professional RNs have been ‘recognized’ far too often as a target for cost-cutting exercises and lost their positions to balance the bottom line. ONA is fighting nursing cuts with our Cutting Nurses, Cutting Care campaign.”

ONA has tracked more than 2,000 RN cuts during the past year and Sudbury residents have seen RN cuts. Registered nurses in Sudbury are working to raise awareness in their community of the threats to quality health care. ONA’s campaign will amplify efforts to stop the nursing cuts that are degrading access to quality patient care.

“For some time, nurses in Sudbury have been worried that the savings being demanded by government of our health-care facilities have been focused on cutting nursing care hours for our patients, impacting their health outcomes with little attention paid to other costs in the system,” said Haslam-Stroud. “We hope that Sudbury residents will see our transit shelter ads and send a message to the government that cutting nurses is not acceptable.”

ONA is the union representing 55,000 front-line registered nurses and allied health professionals and more than 12,000 nursing student affiliates providing care in Ontario hospitals, long-term care facilities, public health, the community and industry.

- Canada News Wire

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