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.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tom Condon on the resettlement of Afghan refugees in CT
Budget guru Keith Phaneuf breaks down Connecticut's cash problem
Keith Phaneuf on the battle to frame Connecticut's state finances
Tom Condon on Fredric March and the Ku Klux Klan
Dave Altimari on a CT Mirror investigation and the cancelation of state hazmat contracts
Jan Ellen Spiegel on changes that could be coming to state solar programs
Katy Golvala on a rise in traffic fatalities during the pandemic
Tom Condon on racial disparities in police traffic stops
Mark Pazniokas explains a key memo in the Kosta Diamantis case
The Political Year Ahead with Susan Bigelow, Dan Haar and Jonathan Wharton
Keith Phaneuf on Connecticut's Fiscal Health
Mark Pazniokas and the Politics of 2022
Would Shrinking The Supreme Court Help Build Consensus?
Outflanked To The Right: Linda Greenhouse Considers The Roberts Court
CT Legislative Wrap Up: Yes To Legal Weed; No To New Taxes, Climate Change Bill
Redistricting in CT: How to Draw a Better Map
Finding Mental Health Solutions For CT Kids
What You Need To Know About A CT Nursing Home Strike
Single Moms Hit Hardest By Pandemic
Transforming Hartford Part 2: Trains, Bikes, Parks, And "Place"
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free