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Oh that's weird. But we had a hunting excursion as a lottery award for getting it so For sure. The pressure was enormous with silly games and competitions between departments. Nurses were posted outside the cafeteria to jab us on our way to lunch, too.
What were they thinking?Oh that's weird. But we had a hunting excursion as a lottery award for getting it so ![]()
I thought you were suggesting sexism with the hunting excursion lottery prize.Oh that's weird. But we had a hunting excursion as a lottery award for getting it so
That's supposed to be the shrugging/I don't know emoji.
No, just tried to use the one on my phone that most looks like me.I thought you were suggesting sexism with the hunting excursion lottery prize.
Pandemics aren't unheard of though. Influenza is the one that is typically watched for, in 2099 I think the vast majority of healthcare workers should have been vaccinated for the flu as an example. Annually , I think those with direct patient contact should be getting flu vaccines too, as long as there isn't a good reason to avoid them.
Why? Do you with they would have just mandated it instead?
Nurses were posted outside the cafeteria to jab us on our way to lunch, too
My employer did not really have a formal pandemic plan until the 2003 SARS outbreak in Toronto. I think, though, that COVID is the first time it has been activated. Not sure even the H1N1 flu outbreak of a several years back was enough to trip it.I worked in health settings from the 80's onwards. We were encouraged to get flu shots and maybe Hep B shots. The idea of a pandemic was largely unheard of. I worked with a FN community ten or so years ago. The nurse who looked after the health unit there worked at pandemic planning so I became aware of the possibility then. I didn't take it very seriously though. Why would I? It was all theory at that point.
What do you think about people not being eligible for EI? I don’t know the labour laws, but is this going too far?
If there's something new at a company an employee refuses to follow safety procedures I don't see why they should qualify for EI.What do you think about people not being eligible for EI? I don’t know the labour laws, but is this going too far? After all, when people were hired vaccinations weren’t mandatory, so if they loose their jobs because conditions change, shouldn’t they be supported so that they can find something else? This doesn’t just affect single people, it could affect children/ families.
If, lets say, someone’s workplace gets modernized and the the employee can’t deal with the new technic and gets laid off because he is not up to snuff for the job anymore, they would get EI. I remember older nurses who retired earlier than planned when everything got computerized.
What about MMR and whatever version of dtp was being used at the time?I worked in health settings from the 80's onwards. We were encouraged to get flu shots and maybe Hep B shots. The idea of a pandemic was largely unheard of. I worked with a FN community ten or so years ago. The nurse who looked after the health unit there worked at pandemic planning so I became aware of the possibility then. I didn't take it very seriously though. Why would I? It was all theory at that point.
What about MMR and whatever version of dtp was being used at the time?
I'm a bit surprised a pandemic seemed so hypothetical for planning when major endemics of things like TB, smallpox, measles, polio, etc. don't require going too far back. I also don't think the HIV pandemic has been declared ended yet.
I'm a bit surprised a pandemic seemed so hypothetical for planning when major endemics of things like TB, smallpox, measles, polio, etc. don't require going too far back.
Yes, I just figured it would make the planning seem reasonable though. Throw epidemics into the mix too.Pandemics and endemics are two different things
Yes, I just figured it would make the planning seem reasonable though. Throw epidemics into the mix too.
Epidemics was moreso of what I was thinking, although endemic outbreaks do become emergencies too.Not at all. And endemic is something we live with. It's manageable. A pandemic is a public health emergency. It requires an immediate response. Apples and oranges.