As sexual assault rates rise, provinces face shortages of specially trained nurses
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — An assistant nursing professor at the University of New Brunswick says there is a crisis-level shortage of sexual assault nurse examiners in the country.
Martha Paynter, who is also an author and well-known advocate for health equity, says most sexual assault nurse examiners are casual employees who work on-call hours on top of full-time nursing jobs.
Paynter says in an interview that many nurses would love to do the work but are grappling with burnout and inflexible working conditions in their regular jobs.
Health officials in New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador say they’ve cancelled plans to train sexual assault nurse examiners after too few nurses signed up.


