As staffing crunch looms, small northern hospitals turning to private nurses
CBC
As hospitals across the province continue to grapple with staffing pressures, a union representing Ontario nurses says that several northern hospitals are turning to private agencies to fill staffing needs.
But the Northern Ontario representative with the Ontario Nurses Association (ONA) says that's not a viable solution to the problem.
Dawn Armstrong, vice president of ONA Region 1, which represents 9,000 nurses across northern Ontario, said outside of the three largest hospitals in the region – Health Sciences North in Sudbury, Sault Area Hospital and Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre – most smaller hospitals are filling staffing gaps through agency nurses.
"A small community about an hour from [Dryden] currently is using 70 per cent agency nurses, and that is not sustainable," Armstrong said.
"That is a huge drain on our public system because as we know, agency nurses get paid a higher wage than the regular nurses working in that facility," she said.
The agency also is paid a fee, and some of these communities are also providing housing, food and travel expenses, Armstrong said.
"We need to start stabilizing the workforce that we have and bringing more registered nurses back into the facilities as regular, full-time staff," Armstrong said.
Cathryn Hoy, the union's president, called it a "gross abuse of health care dollars."
"Say I'm a senior nurse. I make $50 an hour," Hoy said. "If you're an agency nurse, you're going to get paid $100 an hour."
"We're working side by side. But you don't know my hospital. You don't know how the flow goes. You don't know the patients," she said.
Agencies also bill hospitals double what each nurse makes, Hoy estimates.
"Hospitals are paying $200 an hour for a nurse that if they paid them, say, $60 an hour, they could have. So this is abusing health care dollars, but yet the hospitals are paying them over and over and over."
Hoy added that the pressures on nurses, not to mention the financial benefits of working for a private agency, are putting even more strain on the nursing shortage.
"Agency nurses are actually adding to the shortage because they can work less and make the same amount of money," Hoy said. "If I'm making $100 an hour, I only need to go in and work half the time for the same amount of money."