Newswire

Sask. announces over $80M in funding for long-term care projects

REGINA -- Saskatchewan will be investing over $80 million in long-term care facilities across the province. In a release Tuesday, the government said $73 million will fund new long-term care facilities in Grenfell and La Ronge. These facilities have been approved to proceed with advanced planning and design. Another $7.2 million will be used for 82 priority renewal projects in 51 Saskatchewan…

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Many Canadian nurses struggling with PTSD, depression: report

A third of Canadian nurses show symptoms of depression and nearly a quarter have symptoms of PTSD, according to a new national study — led by a Regina team — examining the mental health of nurses. The findings, which Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions (CFNU) president Linda Silas called “quite disturbing,” showed that rates of mental illness among nurses were just as…

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Anxious, depressed, suicidal: new study reveals shocking pre-pandemic levels of mental illness among Canada’s nurses

June 16, 2020 (OTTAWA, ON) – A first-of-its-kind study on mental disorders among Canada’s nurses has been released today, revealing widespread and severe symptoms of PTSD, anxiety, depression, burnout and other conditions. The study, Mental Disorder Symptoms Among Nurses in Canada, is based on pan-Canadian data from 7,358 regulated nurses (RNs, LPNs, RPNs, NPs), collected in…

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Sask. spending $80M to build two long-term care homes and maintain others

The Saskatchewan government is spending $80 million to build, renovate and maintain long-term care facilities in the province, including commitments for more beds in La Ronge and a new facility in Grenfell. But NDP Leader Ryan Meili joined care workers to question why there’s no more money on offer for staffing as they face long-standing challenges and added workloads during the pandemic.…

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eHealth ransomware attack potentially catastrophic for Sask. health card holders: cybersecurity expert

The bad guys slipped the virus into the eHealth Saskatchewan computer system on Dec. 20. For the next 17 days, it crept undetected through the network, copying some of the most sensitive health and personal information collected by government. This massive intrusion stopped Jan. 6, but not because the cyberthieves were caught. That's when the shakedown began. Employees trying to access…

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