Nurses union wants weapons screening, officers, for Alberta hospitals due to violence
The president of the United Nurses of Alberta is calling for quicker installation of weapons scanners at urban hospitals, saying her members face “threats of violence almost daily.”
Heather Smith’s call follows a stabbing last week in the emergency department at Edmonton’s Royal Alexandra Hospital that left a 42-year-old man requiring treatment for life-threatening injuries.
Hospital and Surgical Health Services Minister Matt Jones said after the attack that his government is working to speed up the implementation of weapons screening at the hospital and that the facility has increased its security personnel.
But Smith accuses Jones of underplaying the seriousness of the threat, saying in a letter to the minister that the UNA has strongly advocated since 2023 for a weapons detection system at the Royal Alexandra and other Alberta hospitals with busy emergency departments.

