
Deaf and hard of hearing community feels isolated as Canadian Hearing Society strike continues
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
5 minutes ago
- CBC
Province supports more medical diagnostic procedures in Windsor
RAAMP Endoscopy, an upcoming facility in Windsor, is one of many recipients of new licences to provide medical imaging, scanning, or scoping. Windsor-Tecumseh MPP Andrew Dowie and Dr. Wassim Saad say such facilities will help patients get the diagnostic procedures they need sooner.


CBC
35 minutes ago
- CBC
Nurses vote to 'grey list' Manitoba's largest hospital over safety concerns
Social Sharing Nurses at Winnipeg's Health Sciences Centre have voted in favour of "grey-listing" the hospital in an effort to discourage frontline workers from taking jobs there amid safety concerns. The Manitoba Nurses Union said in a release Friday afternoon 94 per cent of nurses at the facility voted in favour of the measure, which it says its a reflection of their "collective frustration" over unsafe working conditions. Voting was held over several days this week. The vote result means the union will begin advising nurses not to take jobs at the HSC. It follows a string of recent incidents around the hospital, including the including the sexual assault of five people including two nurses in early July. Union president Darlene Jackson previously told CBC News the union has been mulling the move since 2020. Jackson said in the release safety is non-negotiable, calling the situation "untenable." The union has only grey-listed facilities five times previously, the most recent being the Dauphin Regional Health Centre in 2007. The MNU represents 97 per cent of all unionized nurses in Manitoba, according to its website.


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Alberta government appeals injunction of transgender health-care law
Alberta is appealing a temporary injunction of a law banning doctors from providing gender-affirming care to youth. A judge ruled in June that the provincial law raises serious Charter issues that need to be hashed out in an ongoing court challenge of the legislation. Court of King's Bench Justice Allison Kuntz ruled the law is likely to cause irreparable harm to gender diverse youth and contrary evidence submitted from the province wasn't overwhelming enough. The government argues the injunction was premature, since the law wasn't fully in effect, and that the judge made a mistake in deciding it would cause irreparable harm. It has said the law was passed to protect children from making potentially irreversible decisions about their bodies.