“I loved going to work when I first started. Now I dread it:” new study on Ontario’s hospital workers’ deteriorating morale to be released on Monday at Queen’s Park

TORONTO--()--A new peer-reviewed study warns that Ontario’s predominantly female hospital workers are in deep turmoil as they labour through an intensifying staffing crisis that is harming their well-being and compromising patient care. The full results of the study will be announced at a media conference at Queen’s Park on Monday at 10 a.m.

Running on Empty, published in New Solutions: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy, is co-authored by Dr. Margaret Keith and Dr. Jim Brophy, who since 2017 have spearheaded three studies on working conditions in Ontario’s health care sector. Dr. Craig Slatin, a U.S. health researcher, was a co-investigator.

Dr. Brophy will present the findings at the news conference along with co-author Michael Hurley, the president of CUPE’s Ontario Council of Hospital Unions (OCHU-CUPE). The study is based on 26 in-depth interviews with CUPE hospital workers including nurses, personal support workers, and clerical staff. The qualitative study was complemented by a poll surveying 775 hospital workers.

Who:

Dr. James Brophy, researcher affiliated with the University of Windsor, and Michael Hurley, president of OCHU-CUPE, the hospital division of the Canadian Union of Public Employees.

 

What:

Media conference to release findings of new study about Ontario’s hospital workers

 

Where:

Queen’s Park media studio, Toronto

 

When:

10 a.m. on Monday, August 12

gv/cope491

Contacts

Zaid Noorsumar
CUPE Communications
znoorsumar@cupe.ca
647-995-9859

Contacts

Zaid Noorsumar
CUPE Communications
znoorsumar@cupe.ca
647-995-9859