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Head of New Brunswick health network defends big spending on travel nurse contracts

Click to play video: 'N.B government rejected proposed nurse retention plan'
N.B government rejected proposed nurse retention plan
The leadership of the Vitalite Health Network says a plan from 2022 aimed at reducing reliance on travel nurses was rejected by the New Brunswick provincial government. Officials also say the network had no choice but to use agency nurses to avoid shutdowns of critical health services. Silas Brown explains.

The head of New Brunswick’s francophone Vitalité Health Network launched a spirited defence today of the organization’s spending on travel nurse contracts.

Dr. France Desrosiers told a legislature committee that the decision to contract private firms to provide temporary nurses was a matter of “saving human lives by maintaining essential services.”

The province’s auditor general singled out the spending in a June 4 report, finding that between Jan. 1, 2022, and Feb. 29, 2024, Vitalité paid more than $123 million for travel nurses — including $98 million to Ontario-based agency Canadian Health Labs.

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The prices charged by Canadian Health Labs under its contract with Vitalité, which continues until February 2026, were described as exorbitant by Health Minister Bruce Fitch.

Click to play video: 'New Brunswick taken advantage of in travel nurse deals: MLA'
New Brunswick taken advantage of in travel nurse deals: MLA

Desrosiers says the network had little choice but to sign with Canadian Health Labs because the firm had a “monopoly” on bilingual staff.

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Auditor general Paul Martin also said the network refused to give his office access to three internal audits, which Vitalité defended by saying those documents were shielded by a non-disclosure agreement.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 20, 2024.

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