Articles by author: Brock University

  • Ontario ERs facing closure due to longstanding nursing issues, says Brock expert

    EXPERT ADVISORY: 28 July 2022 – R0084

    Situation critical. Recent news that many Ontario emergency departments (ERs) are on the brink of closing due to nursing shortages is dire but not surprising to Connie Schumacher.

    “The ER is usually the first to signal a warning, and ER overcrowding has been an issue that has not been adequately addressed in decades,” says the Assistant Professor of Nursing at Brock University.

    Schumacher says merely hiring more nurses is a short-term solution to underlying, long-festering problems in Ontario’s health-care system that need to be fixed.

    These include:

    • Bill 124, legislation passed in 2019 that limits wage increases to a maximum of one per cent total compensation for three years for registered nurses (RN), nurse practitioners and health-care professionals. “Bill 124 is a contentious issue that has contributed to the moral distress and undervalued climate that now exists within the current nursing workforce,” Schumacher says.
    • A chronic shortage of hospital beds.
    • The loosening of public health measures, such as dropping the mask mandate, “that has allowed for unchecked transmission of an airborne pathogen,” she says.
    • And the lowest RN-to population ratio in Canada, which “has most likely contributed to the current shortage,” she adds.

    “My point is nurses are burnt out and leaving the workforce. There’s a narrative of ‘increase the workforce’ without addressing the underlying issues that pre-existed the pandemic,” she says.

    Schumacher, who is an RN, worked in the ER of Hamilton’s Juravinski/Henderson Hospital from 1998 to 2010.

    “At that time, the ER was constantly in a flux of overcapacity with no access to beds, sometimes having more than 20 admitted patients in the emergency department waiting for beds,” she says. “Beds and nurses are uniquely tied — you cannot increase beds without increasing the complement of staff that would care for the patient occupying the bed.”

    The entire system needs to be reformed, Schumacher says. “Even if we increase the workforce, there still needs to be amenable work conditions as an incentive for RNs to stay in Ontario.”

    Schumacher notes that Brock University has expanded its Nursing program to meet the challenges in the field. She says two years ago, Brock enrolled 80 first-year Nursing students.

    “Come this September, we are projected to exceed an intake of 225 Nursing students in first year,” she says, adding that 94 Nursing students graduated this year.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209 

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock, MTechHub launching manufacturing optimization, data analytics training program

    MEDIA RELEASE: 25 July 2022 – R0083 

    After recently signing a Memorandum of Understanding, Brock University and MTechHub Innovations Inc. are teaming up to help employers boost the skills of their workforce in the area of manufacturing optimization and data analytics.

    MTechHub, a Burlington-based organization that supports digital transformation for Canadian manufacturing, has received $203,150 through the Ontario government’s Skills Development Fund to launch a pilot program in partnership with Brock University’s Professional and Continuing Studies department.

    The Manufacturing Optimization and Data Analytics training program will work with members of MTechHub and industry partners to reskill and/or upskill jobs and advance technology adoption in the field.

    “The partnership with MTechHub is another example of how Brock is working strategically with industry to meet the needs of employers and employees by expanding corporate training and professional learning opportunities,” says University Interim President and Vice-Chancellor Lynn Wells. “This partnership demonstrates our commitment to supporting local economic vitality.”

    The program will strengthen the relationship between the University and MTechHub as well as with their industry partners. Both parties see this as an opportunity to support the manufacturing industry as it continues to evolve.

    “This program will help Canadian manufacturers accelerate their adoption of smart factory technology and improve their ability to compete,” says Mark Corker, MTechHub Executive Director.

    The specialized training program is being designed to address skilled labour shortages in deploying Internet of Things (IoT) and Industry 4.0 technologies, a growing need towards automation and data exchange in technology and processes within the manufacturing industry.

    The advanced manufacturing program will combine online, hands-on and work-integrated learning components that will help participants understand and define the IoT as it relates to data analytics; understand the technology stack of IoT, including sensors, gateways, cloud and data analytics; summarize the types of data captured in the cloud; explore and analyze the data; apply data insights from analyzed data; explain what cybersecurity means; and apply cybersecurity principles.

    “Across southwestern Ontario, employers are struggling to find the skilled digital workers needed to grow their businesses and the economy,” said Monte McNaughton, Minister of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development. “That is why our government is investing in innovative training programs like this, which will help workers gain the skills local employers are looking for, so they can launch meaningful careers and earn bigger paycheques in a 21st-century economy.”

    The Manufacturing Optimization and Data Analytics program will be developed in conjunction with Brock over the next several months, with the first cohort of workers set to begin training this fall.

    April-Dawn Blackwell, Brock’s Associate Vice-President, Professional and Continuing Studies, said the program is an opportunity for the University to further develop and expand its customized industry and professional learning solutions in collaboration with industry partners.

    “This pilot program is one example of how Brock’s expertise in training and skills development can support the needs of employers in attaining their goals for optimization in their organization,” she said. “We always welcome ideas for potential partnerships and programming opportunities that support the Professional and Continuing Studies needs in our community.”

    To learn more about how industry focused training and skills development solutions can support your organization’s strategic goals, email CE@brocku.ca

    This Employment Ontario project is funded in part by the Government of Canada and the Government of Ontario.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209

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    Categories: Media releases