Ottawa

'My hair's been falling out': Nurses hit with protest stress after 2 years of COVID

Nurses are still in the thick of the pandemic and some say the ongoing protest in Ottawa has left them tired and defeated.

Added exhaustion and stress affects care for patients, some nurses say

A nurse in a personal protective equipment walks down a hospital corridor.
Ottawa nurses say they're fighting stress, road closures and exhaustion because of protests against COVID-19 measures. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

COVID-19 might have a lessened impact on many residents compared to last month, or earlier in the pandemic, but nurses are still in the thick of the pandemic and some say the ongoing protest in Ottawa has left them tired and defeated.

Hospital staff have cared for patients throughout the pandemic, but the situation reached a crisis point in this past wave with severe staff shortages, outbreaks, and new COVID-19 hospitalization records. Ottawa set a new pandemic high with 142 patients hospitalized with active COVID on Jan. 16.

Less than two weeks after that record was set, the convoy arrived and the ongoing protest began focused on ending COVID-19 rules across Canada

The protest has now reached its 14th day forcing the closure of downtown streets, businesses and services, while leaving locals scared and frustrated — including nurses.

"I'm stressed going home. I'm stressed coming back from work. It's been awful. My hair's been falling out," said Andrea Waddell, a nurse at The Ottawa Hospital who uses public transit to commute.

I'm stressed going home. I'm stressed coming back from work. It's been awful.- Andrea Waddell, nurse

Waddell has relied on rideshares since the protest began because of the protest's impact on public transit, and has often arrived to work early in fear of potential traffic delays.

"That extra level of tiredness, it slows you down naturally and it takes you longer to do simple tasks," Waddell said.  

The ongoing protest in downtown Ottawa has forced all buses to detour out of the downtown core, which has affected downtown residents who commute using public transit. (Michael Cole/CBC)

Nurse Vanessa Rondeau says she, like some other Ottawa residents, has been harassed for wearing a mask outside on the street. After spending two years on the front lines of the pandemic, she says this treatment has begun to affect her work.

"The protests have definitely made it worse," Rondeau said. "I do find myself a little bit more put out at work, a little bit shorter."

Rondeau, who works at The Ottawa Hospital's Civic campus, said the number of people protesting COVID-19 health measures, including vaccine mandates, has left her feeling defeated.

"On my way home from work, it's hard to see people [protest]. It almost feels like they're opposed to what I'm doing," she said.

Protests have made things 'even more difficult'

The protest has also affected staff at both the Élisabeth Bruyère Hospital and its sister campus, the Saint-Vincent Hospital near Bronson Avenue, according to the hospital's administration. Both are near the core.

"It's making a difficult situation even more difficult," said Rachel Muir, an Ottawa nurse who also heads the local bargaining unit of the Ontario Nurses Association.

Muir said there are several nurses who live downtown and have lost multiple nights of sleep because of the honking, which has only recently been silenced thanks to a court injunction. 

WATCH | Protesters' idling trucks are making downtown Ottawa's air quality worse:

Air quality near Ottawa protest zone worse than Mexico City

3 years ago
Duration 2:01
Idling diesel trucks at the Ottawa protest are pushing harmful emissions into the air, making the air quality four times worse than in Mexico City, a CBC News analysis shows.

Health-care staff are also concerned the protests, made up of large crowds of people refusing to wear face coverings, will lead to a spike in COVID-19 hospitalizations — overloading a health-care system already functioning beyond capacity, she said.

"Ultimately, all we want to do is care for people and do what we do," Muir said. 

"We're not impeding anybody's freedom of expression or freedom of choice because we have the same choices, and we are making different choices."

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

More than the headlines. Subscribe to You Otta Know, the CBC Ottawa weekly newsletter.

...

The next issue of You Otta Know will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.