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The Nunavut Health Care Plan (Inuktitut: ᓄᓇᕗᒻᒥᑦ ᐋᓐᓂᐊᕕᓕᐊᖅᑐᕐᓯᐅᑎᑦ, French: Régime d’assurance-maladie du Nunavut) is the ...
Keith Peterson, was the current member of Legislative Assembly of Nunavut having won in the 2004 election and was acclaimed in the 2008 election. [117] [119] Peterson was the longest serving Minister of Finance, and was Minister of Health and Social Services. [120] He retired in 2017. [121]
Qikiqtani General Hospital (QGH) is a 35-bed acute care hospital in the Nunavut territorial capital of Iqaluit on Baffin Island. [1] It is also the sole hospital in the territory. [ 2 ] The first hospital, the Baffin Regional Hospital , was constructed in 1962, and a new hospital, the Qikiqtani General Hospital replaced the older one in 2007. [ 3 ]
SustiNet is a Connecticut health care plan passed into law in July 2009. [1] Its goal was to provide affordable health care coverage to 98% of Connecticut residents by 2014. [1] The name SustiNet derives from the motto of the State of Connecticut: "Qui transtulit sustinet." (Latin: "[He] Who Transplanted [Still] Sustains").
CBHSSJB is also a small press that publishes Indigenous-focused health materials, such as diabetes pamphlets [6] [7] and Indigenous health-focussed books: two of many examples are The Sweet Bloods of the Eeyou Istchee: Stories of Diabetes and the James Bay Cree, [8] The gift of healing : health problems and their treatments (out of print). [9]
[9]: s.4(3)(c) Iqaluit is the only city in Nunavut, with 7,429 residents and a land area of 51.58 km 2 (19.92 sq mi) in 2021. [3] It incorporated as a city on April 19, 2001. [11] Although Nunavut has no municipalities with town status, the CTVA provides opportunity to incorporate a town. A town can be incorporated at the request of a minimum ...
Nunavut Health Care Plan This page was last edited on 17 May 2020, at 21:16 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
In 2013, Western Connecticut Health Network announced plans to lay off 116 workers in response to state budget cuts. The Danbury Nurses Union voted 96% to reject a proposal to eliminate evening and weekend shift differentials in order to save the jobs of twenty-five nurses, arguing that the hospitals should cut executive pay and use the $35m ...