Awards created to honour nurse, continuing care assistant killed in N.S. mass shooting - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:17 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Awards created to honour nurse, continuing care assistant killed in N.S. mass shooting

VON Canada is establishing awards for nursing graduates in Nova Scotia to honour the memory of a nurse and a continuing care assistant killed in the Nova Scotia mass shooting.

Awards at Dalhousie University named for Heather OBrien, Kristen Beaton

Two separate photos that have been joined. The left photo shows a smiling woman. Right shows a woman smiling and waving.
Heather O'Brien, left, and Kristen Beaton both worked for the Victorian Order of Nurses and were victims in the April 2020 mass shooting in Nova Scotia. (GoFundMe/The Canadian Press/GoFundMe/The Canadian Press)

Victorian Order of NursesCanada is honouringtwo employees who were killed in the Nova ScotiaApril 2020 mass shootingwith memorial awards.

The awards named for Heather O'Brien, a nurse, andKristen Beaton, a continuing care assistant,were created at Dalhousie University.

O'Brien and Beaton, who was pregnant and working that morning, were shot in their separatevehicles along a stretch of road in Colchester County during the gunman's13-hour rampage.

According to a press release, the awardswill go toward supporting students within the continuing care assistant, licensedpractical nursing and registered nursingprograms.

Theywill be given students "who demonstrate attributes that both Heather and Kristen embodied in their work: caring, compassionate and dedicated to the community."

"We wanted it to be something that could go on for years, and honour them in a way that recognizes them as individuals, them in a health-care view, and a way for their families to see them in a positive, honourable way going well into the future," Carol Curley, regional executive director for VON Canada, told CBC in an interview on Thursday.

Curley saidBeaton and O'Brien were deeply dedicated to the organization's mission to provide kind and competent care to patients in their homes.

There was an outpouring of support to the VON from the community and former patients.

"Knowing that something is being done to honour their legacy, I would hope, in a very small way, softens the grief and helps the grieving process for the families," Curley said.

VON Canada also worked with health-care programs at St. Francis Xavier University and the Nova Scotia Community College to develop the VON Memorial Award series.

With files from Jack Julian