Steady Habits: A CT Mirror Podcast
News:Politics
During the pandemic, mid-career and older nurses have experienced burnout, left emergency departments and intensive care units for less stressful positions or retired early. Many younger nurses opted for lucrative traveling assignments. Nurses periodically fell ill with COVID and had to stay home, placing further stress on health care facilities.
The approximately 2,000 nurses graduating from Connecticut institutions this year can't fill those gaps in the workforce.
CT MIrror's economic development reporter Erica Phillips talks to host Ebong Udoma about what's being done to plan for the future. You can read her story here.
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CT Mirror's 2023 Legislative Recap
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Keith Phaneuf's Big Budget Review 2023
Reporter Roundtable: The 2023 Legislative Session
Mark Pazniokas and the Politics of 2023
Growing CT's economy through science and technology
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GOP Senate primary heats up in Connecticut
Bus ridership is coming back in Connecticut
Linda Greenhouse: The end of Roe and a momentous Supreme Court term
What happens to health care prices when doctors' practices are bought up
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