Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Health workers report burnout amid second wave

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2020 07:31 PM
  • Health workers report burnout amid second wave

Sophia Gabiniewicz is well accustomed to dealing with stress as a registered nurse in the intensive care unit at St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver.

But she says it rose to a new level as the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic began to swell and she recognized a familiar face in the ICU.

Gabiniewicz once worked with the woman, a "vibrant" former health worker in her 70s, who told her she had never been hospitalized in her life and that the COVID-19 infection took her by surprise.

"I worried for this person even more than I expected to," she said. "I hoped she would be OK, but I never knew from day to day what to expect. When I went home, I would think about her."

Thankfully, the woman's story had a "happy ending," but Gabiniewicz said it made her realize how stressed she has been.

Gabiniewicz is among many front-line workers feeling the effects of months of strain and is urging members of the public not to bend public health protocols.

News this week that a vaccine is on its way means there is a light at the end of the tunnel, but the risk isn't gone yet.

"I wish that people would really be careful and take it seriously because it's unpredictable," she said.

B.C. Premier John Horgan said on Wednesday that when officials announced some vaccine would be in the province by next week, the news allowed for a brief celebration that the end is near.

"But before we get to that place, as in any race when you see the finish line you don't stop running, you focus, you dig down deep to find that extra resolve to get to the finish line. That's where we are today."

Christine Sorensen, president of the B.C. Nurses Union, said she has heard from nurses across the province who are working extended hours, overtime and forgoing holidays.

The workload for some has been amplified by British Columbia's surgical renewal program, which seeks to catch up on surgeries delayed at the beginning of the pandemic, she said.

"Nurses struggle with moral distress. They want to help their patients, they want to be able to deliver good-quality health care, but they are also exhausted, showing signs of burnout and need time to rest and recover themselves," Sorensen said.

"Nurses haven't really had that time to recover and we're right back into a second wave."

A survey of union members in June found that 41 per cent reported severe depression and 60 per cent were emotionally exhausted, while 57 per cent reported high levels of burnout, Sorensen said.

The pandemic has only highlighted a pre-existing shortage of nurses and a retention problem in the profession, especially in northern B.C., she said. Sorensen pointed to a report by B.C.'s auditor general in 2018 that found more than one-quarter of rural and remote nurse practitioner positions were vacant.

The union wants to see a more fulsome human resources plan at the provincial level to beef up staffing levels, Sorensen said from Kamloops, B.C.

The Health Ministry did not respond to a request for comment in time for deadline.

Kathleen Ross, president of Doctors of BC, said physicians have also adapted to the added workload. But she emphasized that while health workers are under a lot of pressure, it remains vitally important that those who think they need medical care seek it.

"My fear is that our patients' responses will be, 'Oh, I don't want to bother my doctor because they're burnt out,' and let things slide," said Ross, a family physician in Coquitlam, B.C.

"It's really critically important that we encourage patients to continue to contact their family doctors, especially if they've got a chronic illness, because we do not want underlying conditions left untreated."

Levi Elijah is taking a break from working as a mental health aide to support fellow workers as chairperson of the Hospital Employees' Union local at Vancouver General Hospital.

Working at the hospital every day comes with some worry about contracting the virus, said Elijah, who uses the pronouns they and them.

After the initial fear when COVID-19 patients first began arriving at health centres, things slowed down during the summer, but the stresses rose again with the second wave, Elijah said.

"What I have noticed throughout is the ability to cope and our resiliency gets reduced, especially now with the second wave starting and the numbers increasing. We are noticing a higher increase in mental health issues and anxiety," Elijah said.

Mike Old, a spokesman for the union, also said the surgical renewal program and second wave are highlighting staffing challenges.

The union, which represents about 20,000 long-term care and assisted living workers, supported the government's move to limit workers to a single site as a disease control measure, but they're now facing pressure with a second wave and flu season underway, he said.

The government is training more medical device processing technicians and the union is also working with government to fast-track programs to train more health-care assistants, but it takes time, he said.

"That's why it's just so important that people pay attention to public health orders," Old said.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

WATCH: Canada-US Border Closure Extended Till November | BC State of Emergency To Stay

WATCH: Canada-US Border Closure Extended Till November | BC State of Emergency To Stay
The US Canada border closure remains in place and at the eleventh hour US backs down on aluminum tariff dispute with Canada.

WATCH: Canada-US Border Closure Extended Till November | BC State of Emergency To Stay

Study hints antibody drug may cut COVID-19 hospitalizations

Study hints antibody drug may cut COVID-19 hospitalizations
The company said it would talk with regulators about possible next steps but that it was too soon to speculate on whether these interim results might lead to any action to allow early use.

Study hints antibody drug may cut COVID-19 hospitalizations

Lobster protests: N.S. MP demands action

Lobster protests: N.S. MP demands action
On Tuesday, hundreds of non-Indigenous commercial fishermen staged protests at two wharfs in southwestern Nova Scotia, alleging illegal fishing in St. Marys Bay.

Lobster protests: N.S. MP demands action

N.B. murder trial on hold until Tuesday

N.B. murder trial on hold until Tuesday
Raymond faces four counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of Fredericton Police constables Robb Costello and Sara Burns as well as civilians Donnie Robichaud and Bobbie Lee Wright, on Aug. 10, 2018.

N.B. murder trial on hold until Tuesday

Young people need better distancing rules: experts

Young people need better distancing rules: experts
According to the federal government's weekly epidemiology update, the number of new cases nationally increased by 26 per cent during the week of Aug. 30 to Sept. 5.

Young people need better distancing rules: experts

August inflation rate holds steady at 0.1%

August inflation rate holds steady at 0.1%
The average economist estimate had been for a year-over-year increase of 0.4 per cent for August, according to financial markets data firm Refinitiv.

August inflation rate holds steady at 0.1%