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No images? Click here Hello and welcome to Best Of Maclean’s. An Impossible Job: What It’s Like To Work In A Pediatric ICUWhen Rebecca Hay was a teenager in Calgary, her father gave her his 2007 Canon Rebel camera and taught her everything he knew about photography. She took photos of the people she saw and the places she went, and fell in love with the art form, fascinated by its ability to help her see the world from different perspectives. But photography was a hobby, not a career: after graduating university in Ottawa, Hay returned to Calgary to attend medical school. In 2019, during her first year of residency in pediatrics, she was required to work about seven 26-hour shifts per month, along with regular day shifts, all of which left her with little time for rest or photography. She was exhausted, sleep-deprived and constantly on her feet. During rare moments of quiet in the hospital, Hay brought her camera to work. She sat down with friends and colleagues to photograph them and hear about their experiences in health care, sharing their stories on Instagram as part of a series called “26 hr.”... We spoke to some of the health-care workers Hay photographed... On newsstands now: Young Canadians like me are fighting for saner, happier, healthier working lives. What we achieve could transform work for everyone. Also in this issue: The battle over Newfoundland's $16-billion oil project A social worker's elaborate scam The mind-bending future of AIAnd more!Buy the latest issue of Maclean’s here and click here to subscribe. Want to share the Best of Maclean’s with family, friends and colleagues? Click here to send them this newsletter and subscribe. Share Tweet Share Forward
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