Tuesday 9 April 2024

On-site massage chairs available for New Brunswick health-care workers

 

On-site massage chairs available for New Brunswick health-care workers

 

19 RecharjMe cabins, distributed between Vitalité and Horizon Health hospitals and Ambulance N.B. locations

Would this recharge you?

Duration 1:04
Health networks launch 'RecharjMe rest cabins’ to give health workers a space to ‘recharge their batteries’ in the workplace.

During a long day at work, Justin Surette decided to get a massage, with some relaxing music and heat, at Vitalité Health Network's new relaxation booth.

"When I came out, I was feeling like a new person," said Surette.

"It is kind of like waking up in the morning."

Surette, the health and safety adviser at the Vitalité Health Network, is one of the many health-care workers who can now book a 25-minute session at the RecharjMe cabins installed at health centres across the province. 

Two cabins with black doors and a punch code entry system. The cabins were placed at the Dumont hospital's cafeteria earlier this year and have been available for staff use since January. (Rhythm Rathi/CBC)

The relaxation cabins were officially launched on Tuesday at Moncton's Dr. Georges-L.-Dumont University Hospital Centre's cafeteria as a partnership between the Vitalité and Horizon health networks and Ambulance New Brunswick.

The modern-looking, closet-like cabins have just enough space for one occupant to lie down on the reclining massage chair. The reservations are made through an app, which generates a code for the user to begin their session.

The cabins are dark, soundproof and have a wall-mounted touch screen, along with a remote control to change the settings. They offer a vibrating heated massage therapy along with a meditation playlist or relaxing music.

Surette said the cabins were placed at the Dumont hospital's cafeteria earlier this year and have been available for staff use since January. 

"I would say I probably use them at least twice a week, give or take, if not more — depending," he said.

He said some days at work can get hectic and it helps to have this service available to relax and start fresh. Surette said the cabins are popular among the night-shift workers.

"I see a lot of employees using them."

A man touching a screen, while holding a remote control. The cabin offers a vibrating heated massage along with a meditation playlist or relaxing music, which can be controlled and adjusted according to the user's preference. (Rhythm Rathi/CBC)

Pilot project

Brittany Stein, Horizon Health's regional director of employee health, wellness and safety, said a total of 19 RecharjMe cabins are available at various health locations in the province.

She said any health-care employee can access them at any location at no cost, but the access is limited to one session every 24 hours. 

As it gets more popular, the challenge of finding an available spot will increase, but she said that is a positive indication of the service being used well.

"I think we all know health care is really incredibly challenging right now, especially in the province of New Brunswick ... so we want to provide a menu of offerings for health-care workers," she said.

Stein said the cabins are one of a number of initiatives, such as flexible scheduling, to make the experience better for those working in the health-care industry. 

This is a one-year pilot project that will later be assessed to determine its future, she said. 

A white lady with curly blonde hair, speaking at a podium. Brittany Stein, Horizon Health's regional director of employee health, wellness and safety, says the cabins are a one-year pilot project. (Rhythm Rathi/CBC)

The cabins have been successful in many hospital locations in Quebec and are built by a Quebec start-up company, Stein said.

"The project is an extension of the provincial health plan's strategy to increase employee satisfaction, reduce absenteeism brought on by injury or illness and reduce attrition," according to a media release.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Rhythm Rathi

Reporter, CBC New Brunswick

Rhythm Rathi is a reporter with CBC New Brunswick in Moncton. He was born and raised in India and attended journalism school in Ontario. Send him your story tips at rhythm.rathi@cbc.ca

 
 
 
17 Comments
 
 
 
David Amos
Welcome to the circus
 
 
 
 
Marc Bourque  
they need it,they are overworked at the moment.Thanks to the traveling nurses who is picking up the slack...
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Marc Bourque
Well put  
 
 
MR Cain
Reply to Marc Bourque  
Traveling nurses are also soaking the health system for big bucks. 
 
 
Pat Holland 
Reply to MR Cain 
You can’t just make nurses appear out of thin air travel nurses are only meant to help temporarily 
 
 
MR Cain
Reply to Pat Holland 
Temporarily is not a 3 year contract.  
 
 
Benny Swim 
Reply to Pat Holland  
And what was the cost? $160 million? Higg's private sector managerial experience was supposed to make government more efficient. Some efficiency.
 
 
 
 
Jim Lake  
I’m all for supporting and improving the wellness of our very valuable healthcare workers … but this is the ONLY piece of the provincial health plan strategy that has been revealed to New Brunswickers … after how long???

Surely the Higgs government has more than this in their “strategy” for fixing the dire healthcare crisis we are facing in this province … please, someone in government, assure the rest of us that there is more to the “provincial health plan strategy” … please …

 
Lou Bell
Reply to Jim Lake 
Actually they do . Liberals think there are hundreds of family physicians laying around , just waiting to be hired . There has been a shortage of Healthcare workers here in NB for decades , and the liberals hired virtually none their last 4 years in office . They paid for many , we just didn't get any . 
 
 
MR Cain
Reply to Jim Lake  
Doubt if this was part of Higgs plan; he doesn't have one. 
 
 
Pat Holland 
Reply to MR Cain 
I haven’t seen much of a plan come from the liberals side of the bench. 
 
 
MR Cain
Reply to Pat Holland 
Since when have they been required to provide one? We have yet to see Higgs' plan. 

 
Benny Swim 
Reply to Pat Holland  
The Liberals not having a plan justifies Higg's spending much needed funds on massage chairs for staff when patients in the emergency room are not seen by medical staff for hours, and consequently die in THEIR chair?

Also, who ever is in charge of communications in the department of health should be fired. Making the massage chair announcement on the day the inquest releases its recommendation seems designed to give a finger to NB citizens.

  


G. Timothy Walton 
This actually looks like a good idea.

I wonder which friend of Higgs owns a franchise.

 
 
 
Benny Swim 
Another story on this site is about a patient dying in the emergency room after having not been seen by medical staff for 2.5 hours. Yet the health authorities have funds to spend thousands on massage chairs for staff.

Very clear illustrations of a health care system that is completely and utterly rudderless. The Higg's Age in NB health care; an upside down system that makes no sense.

 
 
 
Jake Quinlan
Governments like to spend on one-time costs..shiny toys that are part of one year's budgets and not beyond.....nothing committed to long-term, like hmmm staffing. 
 
 
 

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