Nurses demand apology from health minister
Last Updated: Wednesday, November 11, 2009 | 4:46 PM ET
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
FIQ president Régine Laurent is demanding an apology from the health minister. (CBC)The union federation representing most nurses in Quebec is demanding an apology from Health Minister Yves Bolduc after he threatened disciplinary action against nurses who help people jump the queue to get their flu vaccination.
"The management style the minister has used with us from the start is really contempt and threats — and we’ve had enough," said Régine Laurent, president of the Fédération interprofessionnelle de la santé du Québec (FIQ), at a news conference Wednesday.
The minister ignored nurses' input when preparing the province’s vaccination strategy, Laurent said, but her members have bent over backwards to make the system work, agreeing to work overtime and switch work sites.
Laurent denied her comments have anything to do with the difficult contract negotiations ongoing between nurses and the government.
Speaking in the national assembly on Tuesday, Bolduc said nurses caught giving preferential treatment could face punishment ranging from a simple reprimand to a dismissal.
"For example, someone who would steal a vaccination and sell it … I think that would merit being dismissed," Bolduc said.
'People are making big efforts — and we recognize that at all levels'—Health Minister Yves Bolduc
The minister was reacting to newspaper reports that well-known Quebec singer Claude Dubois had been vaccinated, even though he was not on a priority list.
But Laurent said nurses spend less than two minutes with someone in order to give them their vaccination and nurses cannot be police officers. Patients on priority lists are supposed to be filtered well before they ever reach a nurse, she said.
The vaccination issue was raised again Wednesday in the national assembly.
Parti Quebecois Leader Pauline Marois suggested the minister’s management of the vaccination campaign is the problem.
"You are incapable of giving clear directives," she said.
Bolduc said he never intended to launch a personal attack against any one category of worker.
He acknowledged that more than 300,000 health-care workers are helping with the vaccination campaign. "People are making big efforts — and we recognize that at all levels," Bolduc said.
"What we are denouncing is preferential treatment — and there shouldn’t be anymore…. If there is any preferential treatment that is done in bad faith, we will have to act accordingly."
Share Tools
Latest Montreal News Headlines
- Quebec premier visits storm-stricken Magdalen Islands
- Quebec Premier Jean Charest is skipping out on the second day of the national assembly's winter session to visit people stricken by power blackouts in the Magdalen Islands. more »
- Bruins recover to drop Canadiens in shootout
- Tyler Seguin had the only goal in the shootout as the Boston Bruins recovered from blowing a two-goal lead to defeat the Montreal Canadiens 4-3 on Wednesday night. more »
- Montreal museum offers reward after artifact theft

- Quebec police are seeking the recovery of two ancient artifacts stolen from the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts last fall, with a substantial reward offered. more »
- 4km police chase ends in car breaking down
- Montreal police arrested an impaired driver late Tuesday night after a bumpy 4km chase. more »
Top News Headlines
- Tories move to curb 'bogus' refugees
- The Conservative government is poised to change the refugee system yet again in an attempt to deter what it considers "bogus" claimants, CBC News has learned. more »
- Children of immigrants challenged at school, home
- By 2016, foreign-born youth and Canadian-born youth from immigrant families will make up a quarter of the country's population, according to predictions by the Canadian Council on Social Development. As their numbers grow, more attention is being paid to their successes and failures. more »
- 2 NDP MPs back final Commons vote to kill gun registry
- Two NDP MPs broke party ranks to vote with the government in the final House of Commons vote on scrapping the long-gun registry. more »
- B.C. house party trial hears from tearful teens
- Two teenagers cried as they testified at the trial of a B.C. woman who was charged after a teen died while her son was hosting a party at her house in 2008. more »
Most Viewed/Commented
- 4km police chase ends in car breaking down
- Travellers at Trudeau airport witness flash mob
- Montreal museum offers reward after artifact theft
- Quebec premier visits storm-stricken Magdalen Islands
- Trudeau says sovereignty less of a bogeyman now
- Sweet Isabelle's sexy cookies a St. Valentine's hit
- Quebec students strike over tuition fees
- 2 NDP MPs back final Commons vote to kill gun registry
- Quebec denounces gun registry vote

