Canada’s health system remains short more than 51,000 doctors and nurses, according to a new federal briefing note that shows little progress despite years of warnings about a worsening workforce crisis.
A June 20 Department of Health memo said the country lacks over 23,000 family physicians and 28,000 registered nurses, while also struggling with staff burnout and retention. The shortage, though smaller than past estimates of nearly 90,000, was not explained by officials.
The note acknowledged that tens of thousands of foreign-trained professionals in Canada are still unable to work in their fields. Of 198,000 internationally educated health workers living here, only 58% are employed in the profession they trained for ...
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A June 20 Department of Health memo said the country lacks over 23,000 family physicians and 28,000 registered nurses, while also struggling with staff burnout and retention. The shortage, though smaller than past estimates of nearly 90,000, was not explained by officials.
The note acknowledged that tens of thousands of foreign-trained professionals in Canada are still unable to work in their fields. Of 198,000 internationally educated health workers living here, only 58% are employed in the profession they trained for ...
CLICK HERE for the full story

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