The Telegram (St. John's)

Nurses’ union head optimistic about future plan for nurse practition­ers

- Telegram@thetelegra­m.com

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador needs a plan to help nurse practition­ers stay and work in the province, says nurses’ union president Debbie Forward.

The Registered Nurses’ Union Newfoundla­nd and Labrador (RNUNL) was part of the group of the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions (CFNU), which released Friday a study on the recruitmen­t and retention of nurse practition­ers

They briefed the study to the country’s health ministers, who were at a summit in Winnipeg, Man.

Among their duties, nurse practition­ers across the country diagnose and treat illness, prescribe medication, order and interpret lab and diagnostic tests and can perform certain procedures.

Forward said it was a positive that Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Health Minister John Haggie turned up at the breakfast briefing and she hopes to have future meetings with him to flesh out an expanded role for nurse practition­ers in this province.

There are currently 120 employed in the province, and about another 30 who are licensed.

The trouble is unless employed by a health authority or otherwise funded by government, a nurse practition­er must charge the public a fee if they set up on their own.

“To have to pay out of pocket. That is a huge barrier to 95 per cent of people in the province,” Forward said.

“If we really want nurse practition­ers to be part of primary health care … they have to be funded through the public purse.” Forward said boosting the nurse practition­er program will help the health care system, especially in areas where patients don’t have access to a family doctor. If those patients are left untreated, they will become sicker and that will cost the system more money, she said

“The goal is for government to have a specific strategy around recruitmen­t and retention,” she said, noting the study underlined the nurse practition­ers’ desire for continual profession­al developmen­t whether they practice in rural or urban settings.

If it is a remote setting, that developmen­t is even more critical, she said.

The study by the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions says about one in six Canadians do not have a regular health care provider, and certain groups, including Indigenous peoples and seniors, continue to experience higher rates of chronic diseases.

Among the recommenda­tions are that government­s harmonize NPS’ salaries across all health care settings within each province/territory to bridge the wage gap that currently exists.

The Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions is also calling on the provincial and federal government­s to take steps to better integrate nurse practition­ers into the health care system, fund permanent employment positions for NPS in a variety of settings to improve access to high quality health care, provide an isolated area housing allowance and work with indigenous communitie­s to expand and recruit NPS from, and for, Indigenous communitie­s.

Medium income for fulltime nurse practition­ers in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador is $101,622 and part-timers make $45,000, according to the study.

They are the third lowest paid, higher than New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. The median income nationally is $103,000 full time and $70,000 part time.

The lowest scale of nurse practition­ers make about 4.5 per cent higher than the highest-paid registered nurse scale.

 ?? REGISTERED NURSES’ UNION NEWFOUNDLA­ND AND LABRADOR PHOTO ?? Health Minister John Haggie and Registered Nurses’ Union Newfoundla­nd and Labrador president Debbie Forward were in Winnipeg for the release of a study on nurse practition­ers by the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions Friday morning.
REGISTERED NURSES’ UNION NEWFOUNDLA­ND AND LABRADOR PHOTO Health Minister John Haggie and Registered Nurses’ Union Newfoundla­nd and Labrador president Debbie Forward were in Winnipeg for the release of a study on nurse practition­ers by the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions Friday morning.

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