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Régine Laurent

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Haitian Canadian nurse (born 1957)
Régine Laurent
Born (1957-10-09)9 October 1957 (age 68)
OccupationNurse
Notable workHead of Quebec's Special Commission on the Rights of the Child and Youth Protection


Régine LaurentOQ (born 1957) is aHaitian Canadian nurse who from 1980 spent 35 years working atMontreal's Santa-Cabrini Hospital.[1] From 2009 to 2017, as the first black woman to head the Fédération interprofessionnelle de la santé du Québec (FlQ), the trade union for health services in theProvince of Quebec, she successfully negotiated improved conditions for health workers from the provincial government.[2] In May 2019, she was appointed head of Quebec's Special Commission on the Rights of the Child and Youth Protection.[3]

Early life

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Born on 9 October 1957 inPort-au-Prince, Haiti,[1] Régine Laurent was brought up in a well-to-do home together with her two brothers. Her father was a lawyer and her mother, a schoolteacher. When she was 11, the family emigrated to Canada, settling inMontreal. While studying nursing at theCégep, she gave birth to her first son when she was 18.[2]

Career

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After obtaining her diploma in 1979, she was engaged as a nurse of the Santa Cabrini Hospital in February 1980, after which she gave birth to her second son. She worked in several departments, including the postpartum unit which she loved. When she was unable to obtain summer holidays around 1983, she became involved in the hospital's union, becoming its president in 1985. During the 1990s, she served in various union positions. She left her partner, bringing up her children alone with the assistance of her mother. In 2004, Laurent became president of the nurses union Alliance interprofessionnelle de Montréal (AIM), a position she maintained until 2009. As such, she headed a union with some 6,000 members, including nurses and therapists from Montreal,Montérégie andLaval.[4]In 2009, she was elected president of the Fédération interprofessionnelle de la santé du Québec.[2]

Her action as a trade unionist included the strikes of 1989 and above all 1999, which demonstrated the importance of maintaining stability in health units and established a modern perspective in trade unionism for nurses, namely a clear focus on the patient.[2]

In May 2019, Régine Laurent was appointed head of Quebec's Special Commission on the Rights of the Child and Youth Protection.[3]

Recognition

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On Laurent's retirement from the FlQ in 2017, the members of theNational Assembly of Quebec paid tribute to the "exceptional career of Régine Laurent" in a message which concluded: "Lastly, that it fully recognize Régine Laurent’s contribution to the advancement of equality for women, people from culturally diverse communities and workers in our society."[5] Laurent was named an Officer of theNational Order of Quebec in 2024.[6]

References

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  1. ^abNadeau, Jessica (11 May 2015)."À l'assaut de "l'omertà" dans le réseau de la santé" (in French). Le Devoir. Retrieved20 February 2020.
  2. ^abcdLacoursière, Ariane (8 June 2019)."Portrait de Régine Laurent: "Je lui dois ça"" (in French). La Presse. Retrieved20 February 2020.
  3. ^ab"Une Volonté de faire pour nos enfants". Gouvernement du Québec. 7 February 2020. Retrieved20 February 2020.
  4. ^Pierre, Samuel (2007).Ces Québécois venus d'Haïti: contribution de la communauté haïtienne à l'édification du Québec moderne. Presses inter Polytechnique. pp. 177–.ISBN 978-2-553-01411-6.
  5. ^"A motion to pay tribute to Régine Laurent's work as she heads into retirement". fiq. 29 November 2017. Retrieved20 February 2020.
  6. ^"Régine Laurent: Officière (2024)". National Order of Quebec.

External links

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