-

Ontario Health Care Worker Infections Jump 43.5 Per Cent in 8 Days, COVID-19 Protections, Transmission Advice Inadequate: CUPE

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In just eight days the number of Ontario health care workers infected with COVID-19 rose from 2016 on April 27 to 2892 on May 5. This is an increase of 876 infections, an alarming 43.5 per cent jump.

Today more than 3000 Ontario health care workers are infected with COVID-19. Those on the health care front lines now account for nearly 16 per cent of the province’s COVID cases. That is an infection rate four times that of China and 60 per cent higher than Italy, which sits at 10 per cent health care worker infections. However, Spain is still outpacing Ontario on reported COVID infections among health care staff.

“Staff on the COVID front-lines soldier on each day, fighting a war against a highly infectious virus with inadequate equipment, and not enough of it. Five have died, many are falling sick and many of these casualties are completely preventable,” said Michael Hurley president of the Ontario Council of Hospital Unions (OCHU) the hospital division the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE).

The research on COVID-19, said Hurley shows that the lack of protective gear like N95 masks that block aerosolized virus particles, Ontario’s recently watered-down safety protocols and the failure to do widespread testing are among the factors fueling COVID-19 infections among health care workers. “4 per cent of cases in China are health care workers. China uses airborne precautions for Covid-19. Compare that to 16 per cent of Ontario’s cases where contact/droplet precautions are used. Ontario’s unscientific approach to the virus and its rationing of equipment treat health care workers as cannon fodder. We ask for immediate action from the Premier.”

Across Ontario thousands of hospital and long-term care workers represented by CUPE held a forceful workplace protest on Wednesday calling on the Premier to end the rationing of personal protective equipment (PPE) and to secure higher level N95 masks to better protect them. The union is calling for the GM plant in Oshawa to make the N95 mask, which GM produces at a plant in Michigan.

“So many of the front-line health staff who I’ve spoken with are scared. Frightened they will be infected at work. Doubly worried they will take the infection home to their families. They feel abandoned by this government and the province’s medical officer of health who seems immune to the surge in infections among health care workers. It’s an infection rate that may soon overtake Spain’s happening on his watch,” said CUPE Ontario secretary-treasurer Candace Rennick.

In long-term care where resident deaths and infections are soaring and where staffing levels are already low, PSWs, registered practical nurses and others on the frontlines are getting COVID in large numbers. Despite that, Rennick said upwards of 25 per cent health care workers who file a WSIB claim that they got COVID-19, are being denied benefits.

Ontario health care workers have a limited right to refuse unsafe work, said Rennick and “everyday that this mostly female labour force goes into work, they are at-risk of getting COVID-19. To have their WSIB denied, is just wrong on so many levels and this must change. The province must presume the COVID infection to be work-related and accept these claims.”

lf/cope491

Contacts

Stella Yeadon CUPE Communications
416-559-9300
syeadon@cupe.ca

Canadian Union of Public Employees Logo
Canadian Union of Public Employees Logo

Canadian Union of Public Employees


Release Versions

Contacts

Stella Yeadon CUPE Communications
416-559-9300
syeadon@cupe.ca

More News From Canadian Union of Public Employees

CUPE blasts Ford government for $36 million budget deficit at Scarborough Health Network

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The union representing 2,500 health care workers at Scarborough Health Network is blaming the provincial government as the hospital battles a $36 million budget shortfall. Stacy James, president of CUPE 5852, says that SHN is facing a staffing crisis, which requires a big investment in improving conditions of work and care. However, the current budget deficit could lead to further reduction in staffing that would jeopardize the well-being of staff and patients alike. I...

A historic choice: Yolanda McClean elected CUPE Ontario president

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Delegates at CUPE Ontario’s annual convention have elected Yolanda McClean, the union’s serving secretary-treasurer, to lead Ontario’s largest union. McClean is the first education worker and the first Black woman to be elected president of CUPE Ontario, which represents more than 300,000 members working in the public sector. “I am humbled and honoured to have been chosen by CUPE members to serve in this role,” said McClean. “My foundation, as CUPE Ontario president, i...

Vanderhoof Municipal Workers Vote Overwhelmingly in Favour of Strike Action

VANDERHOOF, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CUPE 1632 members have voted overwhelmingly in favour of strike action following months of uncertainty after Mayor and Council declined to ratify an agreement that had been reached at the bargaining table. “Workers believed a fair agreement had been reached through negotiations,” said Dan Middleton, President of CUPE Local 1632. “After months of delays, our members are asking the employer to honour that agreement and provide some certainty for work...
Back to Newsroom