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Resources and Tools

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This risk assessment audit tool includes a template for long-term care, home care and community health support, and non-clinical areas.
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In long-term care it is increasingly apparent that who is on shift is just as important as how many staff are on shift. Quality care is difficult to achieve when we do not routinely engage with one another in a positive, or civil, manner.
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Programs & Services

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Leading from the Inside Out
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Guidelines & Regulations

Guidelines and Regulations

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WorkSafeBC’s healthcare and social services planned inspection initiative focuses on high-risk activities in the workplace that lead to serious injuries and time-loss claims.
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WorkSafeBC is releasing a discussion paper with proposed amendments to the Current Rehabilitation Services and Claims Manual that guide wage rate decisions related to short-term and long-term disability compensation. Recommended amendments include: These changes may affect your claims costs. Click here to view the proposed changes and offer feedback to WorkSafeBC – The deadline is 4:30 p.m. on Friday, […]
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Safety Huddle

Respectful Return to Work

Learn about the importance of respecting your own and coworkers' right to medical privacy and how to welcome a colleague back to work with kindness and respect.

Instructions

Read the scenario out loud, then use the guiding questions and notes to have a conversation about being respectful of co-workers returning after an absence.

After this huddle Staff should be able to:

  • Explain the importance of respecting their own and their coworkers’ right to medical privacy.
  • Demonstrate how to welcome a colleague back to work with kindness and respect.

Scenario

Someone you work with has recently returned to work after an extended absence and you do not know why they were gone. Some of your co-workers have expressed frustration because they have been feeling short-staffed with them gone. You walk into the break room and overhear some of your co-workers guessing why this person has been absent.

Notes to the huddle leader

  • Discuss why it is important to not talk about the reasons co-workers may not be at work. Some examples are:
    • Everyone has the right to medical privacy and may not want to share their medical information with others.
    • Knowing that co-workers are likely gossiping can make it stressful to come back to work.
    • When gossip happens often in the workplace, staff may be less likely to call in sick and try to hide their symptoms. Staff who are sick at work put other staff and residents/clients at risk.
  • If staff have questions about staffing, a co-worker's absence or ability to work, they should speak privately with their manager.
  • Encourage staff to treat each other with kindness and empathy. Inappropriate behaviour can harm trust, communication, and psychological health and safety in the workplace which can lead to mistakes and accidents.

Guiding questions

  • In this scenario, do you have a right to know why your co-worker was absent?
  • How could you approach their situation from a position of empathy?
  • If you were returning from an unexpected long absence, how would you like to be welcomed back to work?
Downloads
SafetyHuddle_RespectfulReturnToWork.pdf
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Respectful Return to Work

Additional Resources

More Safety Huddles

Working with clients or residents and their families is not always easy. You may not be able to control how others act, but you can control how you respond.
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Transfers
Learn when it is safe to transfer a person in care and know what to do if it is not safe to transfer.
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We strive to empower those working in the continuing care sector to create safer, healthier workplaces by fostering a culture of safety through evidence-based education, leadership, and collaboration.
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