Sep 28, 2005, 04:51 PM
I work in winnipeg. Working conditions vary from hospital to hospital and ward to ward within the hospital. It is very dependent on management and how supportive they are of nurses to get good working conditions. This can mean everything from creating a positive workplace culture, to nice scheduling, to providing a staff lounge, to staff mix and staff: pt ratios.
The number one reason I have seen people resign from a job is scheduling concerns. The "rotation" is BIG deal - many places try to have repeating patterns of shifts, so you work the same pattern of days and nights every four weeks or every six weeks. The turnover from nights to days and back again can be really tough to work, depending on the specific pattern of your rotation. If your rotation makes you so tired that you spend all your time off "recovering" from work, it's a destructive influence on your life and health.
YOu can get info from the Manitoba Nurses Union if you want data on what wages and benefits are, etc. But janfrn's description sounds pretty accurate to me. Mostly, nurses have it pretty good in manitoba - contract wise, that is. As I said, what it's "really" like to work as a nurse in manitoba, day in and day out.... depends where you work.
Where I work, in an acute surgical unit, each nurse has six patients. Sicker patients are in the step-down, where there are two nurses, and each nurses has two patients each. It can be very busy. Nurse: pt ratio, how many Health Care aides you have, etc - all decided by the manager. If it's unsafe on the unit, the nurses have grievance procedures through the union, to demand that the employer provide safer staffing levels. The resources of the hospital are important as well. Physiotherapists, social workers, Speech Pathologists, Clinical Resource nurses, Respiratory Therapists (I love RT's!)..... these people are an added "help" when you don't know how best to help your patients. Some hospitals have more supports in place than others. Rural areas can be spread pretty thin.
Your description of your project sounded very broad - but I hope this info helps you at least a little bit!
-Claire
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