Friday, June 26, 2026
ADVT 
National

Anti-violence program for B.C. health-care workers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Oct, 2022 01:04 PM
  • Anti-violence program for B.C. health-care workers

VANCOUVER - The B.C. government has announced a program to help reduce violence against health-care workers at 26 hospitals and mental health facilities across the province.

Health Minister Adrian Dix says 320 protection service officers and 14 people tasked with preventing violence will be hired to enhance the safety of nurses and other health-care staff as well as patients and the public.

He says that since the summer of 2021, over 4,400 reported incidents of violence have occurred, resulting in about $7 million in employee time-loss claims, but the impact on workers can't be quantified in dollars.

The BC Nurses Union has been calling for better protective measures for its members for at least 30 years.

Its president, Aman Grewal, says nurses are punched, kicked, grabbed and verbally and sexually harassed at increasingly dangerous workplaces, where injury rates are under-reported and higher than those affecting first responders.

Grewal says the stress and fear at work has been compounded due to staffing shortages as people lash out at nurses for everything from long wait-lists to cancelled surgeries.

MORE National ARTICLES

Mission man suffers self-inflicted wounds in presence of police

Mission man suffers self-inflicted wounds in presence of police
During the course of searching the 2-storey home officers reportedly heard a gun shot, and located the injured man with what appeared to be a self-inflicted injury and an alleged weapon.    

Mission man suffers self-inflicted wounds in presence of police

Investigating collision with cyclist suffering serious injuries: Richmond RCMP

Investigating collision with cyclist suffering serious injuries: Richmond RCMP
A white Nissan Rogue was driving Westbound on Steveston Hwy when a cyclist, heading North on Railway Ave, entered the intersection. The cyclist suffered serious injuries and was transported to a local area hospital. The cyclist remains in hospital.

Investigating collision with cyclist suffering serious injuries: Richmond RCMP

Canada ships seeds to Ukraine amid food shortage

Canada ships seeds to Ukraine amid food shortage
Ukraine's government has asked Canada to send seeds as well as testing equipment to certify grain being transported by rail through Europe. Russia has blockaded Ukraine's ports, including Odesa, and Ukraine's silos are bursting with grain from its last harvest, which it cannot export.

Canada ships seeds to Ukraine amid food shortage

Canada's COVID response among world's best: study

Canada's COVID response among world's best: study
They compared Canada, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States — all countries with similar political, economic, and health-care systems.

Canada's COVID response among world's best: study

Trudeau announces new Russia sanctions at G7

Trudeau announces new Russia sanctions at G7
The new sanctions include 46 entities linked to the Russian defence sector, 15 Ukrainians who support the Russian occupation of the country and 13 people linked to government and defence and two entities in Belarus.

Trudeau announces new Russia sanctions at G7

More heat domes may alter ecology forever: experts

More heat domes may alter ecology forever: experts
Three successive Canadian records were set in the town of Lytton, where the temperature topped out at 49.6 C on June 30, the day before fire destroyed most of the village.    

More heat domes may alter ecology forever: experts