Saturday, April 25, 2009

Pinoy Nurses Seeking US Jobs are Becoming Few...


"ONZE LIEVE VROUW" a nursing home two blocks away from the university.

They cater for dementia patients and almost 100 elderly residents with fully furnished rooms until 3rd floor that is therapeutically managed.

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The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) yesterday said the number of Filipino nurses who have sought employment in the United States during the first quarter of 2009 has gone down by 10.5percent.

Citing records of the US National Council Licensure Examination (NCLEX), TUCP secretary-general and former senator Ernesto Herrera said that from January to March this year, a total of 4,194 Filipino nurses took the test for the first time.

But during the same period last year, the number of first-time NCLEX examinees reached 4,686. For 2008, the number of first-time examinees was 20,746 or 3.5 percent lower compared to the 21,499 examinees in 2007.

“It is quite possible that the severe global economic downturn, which has hit America hard, has somewhat dampened for now the desire of some Filipino nurses to seek employment there,” Herrera said.

Herrera, however, said the US healthcare industry as a whole and hospitals there have been continuously hiring staff, “while other industries have been throwing out workers.”

He added that while some 5.1 million workers have been displaced in the US since the recession in December 2007, the healthcare sector still managed to create 30,000 new jobs every month in 2008.

Herrera underscored the need for nursing students to specialize in geriatric nursing or the provision of nursing services to the elderly to enable them to pursue their profession.

“The populations of America, Japan and other industrialized countries are getting very old. There is tremendous demand now for geriatric nurses,” he said.

Herrera added that if the country would continue to produce and export nurses, “we might as well make our programs highly responsive to the demands of the global market.”

“This way, fresh nursing graduates would readily obtain gainful employment overseas,” he said, warning that the huge oversupply of nurses is keeping their wages in the local front “even more depressed.”

“We now have more than half a million nurses looking for jobs, including the 67,220 who passed the local licensure examinations in July 2008 and February this year,” he added.

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I think this article depicts what really is necessary for us nurses to take actions of our unemployment. I did a tour in one of the nursing homes here where I have applied and I will be doing an evaluation work next week. I was very surprised how dementia patients were catered, I have no idea at all, even a bed bath because it was completely a different set-up. Thats the time where I saw that doors are automatic and bathtubs can be reversibly movable..huh!..

I had my interview with three respectable people, the head nurse, the director of the nursing home, and the assistant director...It was a very difficult interrogation but they have asked me to try out first...If it doesnt go, there are still a lot of nursing homes but I will show them how Filipinos take care of patients that they for years have never done.