A registered nurse works with a patient in the intensive care unit at the Halifax Infirmary, in Halifax, on Friday, Feb. 25, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS_Andrew Vaughan CANADAHALIFAX news Nova Scotia isn’t retaining young nurses, according to new study by admin 24 أكتوبر، 2025 written by admin 24 أكتوبر، 2025 55 CITYnews halifax / By Natasha O’Neill For every 100 young nurses who entered the profession in 2023, over half left Nova Scotia, a new study details. Montreal Economic Institute’s (MEI) newest research, out Oct. 22, showcases provinces across the country are struggling to retain young nurses, and Nova Scotia has one of the worst track records, the data shows. Using numbers from the Canadian Institute for Health Information, the researchers could see how many nurses were employed, unemployed or registered to practice. This year’s focus was on the retention rate of nurses under the age of 35. The data shows that between 2014 and 2023, there was a 23 per cent difference in young nurses leaving versus entering the workforce in the province. That equals to 57 leaving for every 100 that entered the workforce. “In Nova Scotia, we’re seeing numbers that are worse than the national average,” Samantha Dagres, Communications Manager at MEI, told The Todd Veinotte Show. Related: 10% of patients leaving emergency rooms in Nova Scotia before treatment ‘Significant gaps’ in health care knowledge in addressing violence against women: Study IWK launches African Nova Scotian Service for culturally relevant mental health care Dagres said that the focus on young nurses shows the retention problems in the province and the working conditions for those employees. She said that numbers indicate many nurses are entering the workforce, and it has been higher than in 2014. “But what’s really increasing uptake is nurses leaving,” she said. “It tells us that people are deciding to leave the province, but people are also deciding to leave the workforce.” A survey the publication does with nurses each year noted that employees are involuntarily working overtime. Dagres said that this overtime work can be particularly hard on people starting a family, which might be why the ratio drops off at 35. The study noted that British Columbia had the highest retention of young nurses, which could be because of more flexible schedules. “A shift swapping pool is hugely popular in the province,” Dagres said. “That has really improved retention.” (Graph from MEI) 0 comment 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail admin previous post Driver faces long list of charges after evading police, crashing in North End next post Nova Scotia’s Christina Black feels curling buzz ramping up You may also like كارني ناقش مع شينباوم مجالات التعاون بين بلديهما 27 أبريل، 2026 بريتيش كولومبيا: الخمور الأميركية ستبقى محظورة لأنّ الناس... 27 أبريل، 2026 تحقيق في مزاعم إغراق السوق برفوف فولاذية قادمة... 27 أبريل، 2026 سفير كندا لدى واشنطن يعتذر لتوجيهه دعوةً بالإنكليزية... 27 أبريل، 2026 Liberals must show results in spring economic update:... 27 أبريل، 2026 Bayers Road blood collection clinic to reopen Tuesday 17 مارس، 2026 Thousands of power outages as rain and wind... 17 مارس، 2026 ’’يجب تجنّب‘‘ أيّة عملية إسرائيلية واسعة في لبنان... 17 مارس، 2026 تونس وسلطنة عُمان ضيفتا شرف معرض الكتاب العربي... 17 مارس، 2026 لبنان: حربٌ ومستشفىً وثلاثة بورتريهات 17 مارس، 2026