Rally to honour nurses demands more funding for public health services
Samantha Schwientek - GLOBAL NEWS
About 200 people came out to a rally to support nurses at the Alberta Legislature Building Saturday afternoon. Similar rallies were also held in Calgary, Red Deer, Lethbridge and Medicine Hat.
Heather Smith, president of United Nurses of Alberta, said the event was organized as part of National Nurses Week to thank nurses for their ongoing work throughout the pandemic.
But Smith said there were other reasons for the rallies as well — she's worried about increasing privatization and underfunding of public health care.
"What we need is money and political will to invest in public health care," Smith said. "We need to move forward with things like pharmacare and real reforms to our long term care system."
Sue Reid, a retired anesthesiologist who worked in Edmonton for 30 years, said she showed up to honour nurses and also to advocate for "publicly funded, publicly delivered health care."
© Julien Latraverse/Radio-CanadaHeather Smith, president of United Nurses of Alberta, said she would like to see more funding for public health care from both the provincial and federal governments.
Reid spoke at the rally as a member of Canadian Doctors for Medicare, a group that aims to improve publicly-funded universal health care.
Earlier this year, the Alberta government proposed using public funds for surgeries at private clinics to clear surgery backlogs.
Reid said she worries the move could potentially worsen public surgical services.
"You steal people from the public hospital system and put them in the private system and there's no surplus," she said. "So if you're an anesthetist working in the private OR [operating room], then the one public OR is closed."
Her concerns were echoed by Chad Ohman, technical producer at ProtectOurProvince Alberta.
"We're seeing that with Alberta Precision Laboratories being privatized over to Dynalife," Ohman said.
Dynalife Medical Labs was set to take over a majority of community lab services on July 1, but the move has been delayed until Dec. 5 because of operational issues.
For Smith, these issues demonstrate a greater need for more public health funding from both the provincial and federal governments.
She added she would like to see money from the federal government come with "strings attached" so it can't be directed toward private services.
Heather Smith, president of United Nurses of Alberta, said the event was organized as part of National Nurses Week to thank nurses for their ongoing work throughout the pandemic.
But Smith said there were other reasons for the rallies as well — she's worried about increasing privatization and underfunding of public health care.
"What we need is money and political will to invest in public health care," Smith said. "We need to move forward with things like pharmacare and real reforms to our long term care system."
Sue Reid, a retired anesthesiologist who worked in Edmonton for 30 years, said she showed up to honour nurses and also to advocate for "publicly funded, publicly delivered health care."
© Julien Latraverse/Radio-CanadaHeather Smith, president of United Nurses of Alberta, said she would like to see more funding for public health care from both the provincial and federal governments.
Reid spoke at the rally as a member of Canadian Doctors for Medicare, a group that aims to improve publicly-funded universal health care.
Earlier this year, the Alberta government proposed using public funds for surgeries at private clinics to clear surgery backlogs.
Reid said she worries the move could potentially worsen public surgical services.
"You steal people from the public hospital system and put them in the private system and there's no surplus," she said. "So if you're an anesthetist working in the private OR [operating room], then the one public OR is closed."
Her concerns were echoed by Chad Ohman, technical producer at ProtectOurProvince Alberta.
"We're seeing that with Alberta Precision Laboratories being privatized over to Dynalife," Ohman said.
Dynalife Medical Labs was set to take over a majority of community lab services on July 1, but the move has been delayed until Dec. 5 because of operational issues.
For Smith, these issues demonstrate a greater need for more public health funding from both the provincial and federal governments.
She added she would like to see money from the federal government come with "strings attached" so it can't be directed toward private services.
Advocates rally at Lethbridge City Hall to support public health-care system
Erik Bay - .
Global News
Lethbridge joined several cities across the province playing host to rallies in support of Alberta's public health-care system over the weekend.
Organized by the Lethbridge and District Labour Council and Alberta Federation of Labour, roughly 50 people attended the event held at city hall.
Read more:
Albertans rally to support public health-care system
"We're trying to do it across the province, and get the energy up and bring the conversation to the forefront," organizer Krysty Thomas said.
"There's been a dismantling of our public health care services.
"We're seeing privatization in the labs, wait times going up, lack of hospital beds, hospitals put in place but no staff to staff them. It's a real issue across the board," Thomas said.
Video: Town of Fort Macleod hoping incentives cure municipality’s doctor shortage
Many in the assembled crowd were holding signs showing support for Alberta's public health-care system.
"We need a provincial government who will support public health care, rather than attack it," Friends of Medicare executive director Chris Gallaway said. "Who will mend relationships with doctors and health care workers and respect them. There's this real need for respect."
Similar rallies were scheduled in Calgary, Edmonton, Red Deer and Medicine Hat.
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