Different nurse recruitment tool makes a difference
PRINCE GEORGE – The Central Interior via the college of New Caledonia and the University of Northern BC, graduate more than a hundred nurses each year from a variety of campuses. Most recently, the Province added a new accelerated program that will add to that mix in a couple of years. It’s all good news for Northern Health, the main recruitment body for every community in the region.
“Going back maybe 10 years, I’ll say, for Northern Health, it was a bit of a supply and demand issue,” explains Marc Lawrence, Executive Director for GoHealth in Northern Health. “Nurses would graduate from nursing school and they’d be looking for a job, and the supply might not have been in preferable communities. So if they wanted a full-time job, they would just have to look at going to a second-choice community. And that typically would be in the north. So we were able to recruit a lot of nurses through that supply and demand favorability, That’s changed, I would say, in recent years.”
What changed, says Lawrence, is a program called GoHealth. It draws on recruitment in the resource sector. The fly in-fly out model.
