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  2. Nursing shortage in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nursing_shortage_in_Canada

    The 2019 commissioned Ernst & Young review of the province of Alberta's health care reported that the province ranked seventh on access to nurses. [23] One of the reasons given for Canadian nurses leaving Canada for the United States was unsafe patient ratios. In Ontario, one nurse said she was responsible for caring for six patients at a time ...

  3. Alberta Health Services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alberta_Health_Services

    From 1992 to 2000, Alberta's Conservative Premier Ralph Klein oversaw deep cuts to provincial health as part of his focus on eliminating Alberta's deficit. [5] Klein replaced hundreds of local boards of directors of hospitals, long-term care and public health services, with 17 health authorities based on geographic regions.

  4. Healthcare in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Healthcare_in_Canada

    There are some provinces that are moving towards private health care away from public health care. [ citation needed ] The result is that there is a wide variance in what is covered across the country by the public health system, particularly in more controversial or expensive areas, such as mental health, substance use treatment, in-vitro ...

  5. Ministry of Health (Alberta) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ministry_of_Health_(Alberta)

    On May 15, 2008, then-Health Minister Ron Liepert, announced the creation of "Canada's first province-wide, fully integrated health system"—the Alberta Health Services (AHS)—as a quasi-independent agency of the Alberta government with a mandate to public health services throughout the province.

  6. Nursing in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nursing_in_Canada

    Thus, Alberta's District Nursing Service was created in 1919 to coordinate women's health resources of the province. Alberta's District Nursing Service developed chiefly from the organized and persistent political activism of UFWA members and only minimally from the actions of professional nursing groups that were clearly uninterested in rural ...

  7. The WHO did not merely consider health care outcomes, but also placed heavy emphasis on the health disparities between rich and poor, funding for the health care needs of the poor, and the extent to which a country was reaching the potential health care outcomes they believed were possible for that nation. In an international comparison of 21 ...

  8. Poverty in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poverty_in_Canada

    This means that each province and territory has its own minimum wage. The lowest general minimum wage currently in force is that of the Saskatchewan ($11.45/hour), the highest is that of British Columbia ($15.20/hour). [136] Some provinces allow lower wages to be paid to liquor servers and other tip earners, and/or to inexperienced employees.

  9. Health regions of Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_regions_of_Canada

    Health regions, also called health authorities, are a governance model used by Canada's provincial and territorial governments to administer and deliver public health care to all Canadian residents. Health care is designated a provincial responsibility under the separation of powers in Canada's federal system .

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    related to: vulnerable population elderly and public health nursing jobs alberta province
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