B.C. Hospital Employees Union urges better working conditions, higher wages to address staff shortages at Chilliwack General Hospital
CHILLIWACK — If you ask the union representing more than 50,000 hospital employees across the province, tackling chronic staffing shortages at Chilliwack General Hospital requires more than just money.
As CGH drops to just two operating rooms this summer as is often the case, and staffing vacancies persist in departments like medical device reprocessing and surgical day care, the union representing health care workers and other non-physician staff at hospitals across British Columbia says the Trudeau government needs to up its game.
“The feds should pony up more resources so that we can provide British Columbians the kind of health care system they deserve in the future,” said Hospital Employees Union spokesperson Mike Old. “The federal government went into our national Medicare decades ago with a 50-50 agreement. Their share of funding has fallen dramatically to 22 percent. We need to have investments that make our health care system sustainable over the long period.”
The medical and surgical wards, as well as the emergency room and operating room, at Chilliwack General Hospital are presently short on staff. The same can be said for the Bradley Centre, where that department is short on licensed practical nurses, and the medical device reprocessing unit, which is short by up to six positions.
