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an article taken from news.balita.com...

nursing exam flunkers may still be licensed as practical

tuesday, july 24 2007 @ 04:07 pm bst

national

the department of labor and employment on friday said nursing licensure examinees who would not pass the june 2007 exam may still have the opportunity to practice their course through a scheme the dole has been trying to work out.

labor secretary arturo brion said only half of the 78,000 examinees, including the 12,000 retakers, were projected to pass the board licensure test.

dole is contemplating on a fall back position of issuing licenses as practical nurse to those who would fail the test.

"[we are anticipating] that many of them will do re-take so we think that one fall back position is to have them licensed as practical nurse. this is assuming that there are some that would not do the re-take," brion said.

the labor chief said he already proposed this measure to senator edgardo angara and to the commission on higher education and to the professional regulatory commission and they all agreed to its viability.

"licensing the nursing examinees who failed the board exam as practical nurse is a way of helping them achieve their dreams of finding employment opportunities abroad," he said.

"these will be a sunrise opportunity for them because they could still practice their course even though they failed the test," he added.

brion noted that demands for practical nursing are similarly increasing especially in hospitals abroad.

results of the june nursing board exam would be out "by the middle of august."

the next licensure exam for nurses is scheduled in december.

the 12,000 retakers in june were those who wanted to seek employment in the united states following the decision of the commission on graduates of foreign nursing schools to deny work visas to the june 2006 examinees because of allegations of cheating that marked the testing process.

the philippines failed to convince cgfns to reconsider its position. (pna)

It is astonishing to see how this government fails to address the basic underlying problem of licensure failure.....THE POOR QUALITY EDUCATION is the root cause of this abysmal failure of graduating nurses!

As Suzanne so eloquently points out, 630,000 students cannot possibly get proper clinical time or class participation when 18 -25 students hover over one poor patient!! This is an atrocious rip off of young students trying to get a very expensive education!

The failure rate is a direct result of overcrowded diploma mills that are churning out vast numbers of "bodies" who cannot possibly hope to compete as competent nurses!!

Those schools who fail to get AT LEAST 60% passing rates for the NLE 2 years in a row should be suspended immediately with students getting refunds for the wasted efforts by these poor performing "schools".

Mandatory student/teacher and student/patient ratios should be implemented immediately as a basic start to getting better quality training for these deserving students. If this does not change in the near future, I am sure the EU, US and other countries will start selecting graduates based on the top performing colleges and universities...and turning down graduates from the consistently poor performing schools that fail to educate.

The Nurse education system in the Philippines is in deep crisis! Do not let this degradation ruin the former great reputation of Philippine Nurses who have set the benchmark of excellence these past years. Shame indeed!!

Hoss

And for those that post on the International Forum about it being a necessity that the US accept them because they have decided that they must work in the US; perhaps they should steer their letter writing campaign to those officials in their own country that come up with statements like this that was posted above.

Why in the world would a country want to grant a work visa of any type to a person that could not pass the licensing exam in their own country? Makes no sense at all, and wonder if this wonderful official is the same one that approved the LPN programs there that do not get anyone a visa to work in the US. And for those that have been told that they will have no problem getting a visa: think again. There are no visas for LPNs, period. To have an agency tell you otherwise, just means that they are bringing you in as unskilled laborers, and that is immigration fraud and you are subject to deportation for minimum of ten years but I suspect even longer.

Wonder who this wonderful official has taking care of him or his family members? Wonder if he also leaves your country for medical care, since he has no idea of what it truly going on there.

Shame on him for not doing his homework. And is he not the same one that came out with those ridiculous statements last August when things came out about the June, 2006 NLE?

It is astonishing to see how this government fails to address the basic underlying problem of licensure failure.....THE POOR QUALITY EDUCATION is the root cause of this abysmal failure of graduating nurses!

As Suzanne so eloquently points out, 630,000 students cannot possibly get proper clinical time or class participation when 18 -25 students hover over one poor patient!! This is an atrocious rip off of young students trying to get a very expensive education!

The failure rate is a direct result of overcrowded diploma mills that are churning out vast numbers of "bodies" who cannot possibly hope to compete as competent nurses!!

Those schools who fail to get AT LEAST 60% passing rates for the NLE 2 years in a row should be suspended immediately with students getting refunds for the wasted efforts by these poor performing "schools".

Mandatory student/teacher and student/patient ratios should be implemented immediately as a basic start to getting better quality training for these deserving students. If this does not change in the near future, I am sure the EU, US and other countries will start selecting graduates based on the top performing colleges and universities...and turning down graduates from the consistently poor performing schools that fail to educate.

The Nurse education system in the Philippines is in deep crisis! Do not let this degradation ruin the former great reputation of Philippine Nurses who have set the benchmark of excellence these past years. Shame indeed!!

Hoss

And how about mandatory requirements that clinical instructors actually have valid work experience before being permitted to teach. I find that just not appropriate at all.

Specializes in Vents, Telemetry, Home Care, Home infusion.

those schools who fail to get at least 60% passing rates for the nle 2 years in a row should be suspended immediately with students getting refunds for the wasted efforts by these poor performing "schools".

hoss

that is exactly what happen's in pa per our bon regulations:

21.26 failing rate of a school in examination.

if 40% or more of the first-time examinees of a school of nursing writing the examination in this commonwealth fail the examination, the school will be placed on provisional approval status. the board may consider additional documented statistics concerning the examination scores received in other states by commonwealth graduates in determining the status of the school.

faculty and staff requirements for baccalaureate and associate degree programs.

guidelines for developing a new nursing education program

ONE person with knowledge and insight has indeed put his finger on the problem...Dr. Jaime Galvez Tan, former secretary of health and director of the National Institute of Health, UP, who has made it his lifework to campaign for the arrest of "the deterioration of nursing education."

Here is a link to an excellent article from the Manila Times!

Sunday, August 06, 2006

SPECIAL REPORT: Nursing

Nursing decline: Heavy toll on nation's health

By Francis Cueto

THE state of nursing education in the country is a favorite topic among reform-minded government officials, health experts, lawmakers, nurses and the media.

They should listen to Dr. Jaime Galvez Tan, former secretary of health and director of the National Institute of Health, UP, who has made it his lifework to campaign for the arrest of "the deterioration of nursing education."

At issue is not the quality of nurses who graduate and pass the Philippine licensure examination, which is one of the world's best and toughest. The issue is the health of nursing education and how this had affected the training of nursing students and the quality of nursing service.

Dr. Tan says one proof of the decline is falling pass percentage in nursing licensure examinations since 1994. (See Table I, from the Professional Regulation Commission Table 1, showing the passing percentages from the June 12, 2001, licensure exam to the June 12, 2006, exam.) LINK to continue story:

http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2006/aug/06/yehey/top_stories/20060806top1.html

ONE person with knowledge and insight has indeed put his finger on the problem...Dr. Jaime Galvez Tan, former secretary of health and director of the National Institute of Health, UP, who has made it his lifework to campaign for the arrest of "the deterioration of nursing education."

Here is a link to an excellent article from the Manila Times!

Sunday, August 06, 2006

SPECIAL REPORT: Nursing

Nursing decline: Heavy toll on nation's health

By Francis Cueto

THE state of nursing education in the country is a favorite topic among reform-minded government officials, health experts, lawmakers, nurses and the media.

They should listen to Dr. Jaime Galvez Tan, former secretary of health and director of the National Institute of Health, UP, who has made it his lifework to campaign for the arrest of "the deterioration of nursing education."

At issue is not the quality of nurses who graduate and pass the Philippine licensure examination, which is one of the world's best and toughest. The issue is the health of nursing education and how this had affected the training of nursing students and the quality of nursing service.

Dr. Tan says one proof of the decline is falling pass percentage in nursing licensure examinations since 1994. (See Table I, from the Professional Regulation Commission Table 1, showing the passing percentages from the June 12, 2001, licensure exam to the June 12, 2006, exam.) LINK to continue story:

http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2006/aug/06/yehey/top_stories/20060806top1.html

After reading all about this stuff on this thread, its painful to face how people are willing to sacrifice quality education for the sake of raking in all the profit by accepting anyone who wants to study nursing. BSN is a tough course, if you happen to be educated in a reputable school. gosh, it is a shame that so many fly-by-night schools prey on the dreams of people, people who may or may not be meant to be nurses but just forced to take it in the first place. oh my, there has to be measures taken to stricly screen qualified applicants to the program.

ONE person with knowledge and insight has indeed put his finger on the problem...Dr. Jaime Galvez Tan, former secretary of health and director of the National Institute of Health, UP, who has made it his lifework to campaign for the arrest of "the deterioration of nursing education."

Here is a link to an excellent article from the Manila Times!

Sunday, August 06, 2006

SPECIAL REPORT: Nursing

Nursing decline: Heavy toll on nation's health

By Francis Cueto

THE state of nursing education in the country is a favorite topic among reform-minded government officials, health experts, lawmakers, nurses and the media.

They should listen to Dr. Jaime Galvez Tan, former secretary of health and director of the National Institute of Health, UP, who has made it his lifework to campaign for the arrest of "the deterioration of nursing education."

At issue is not the quality of nurses who graduate and pass the Philippine licensure examination, which is one of the world's best and toughest. The issue is the health of nursing education and how this had affected the training of nursing students and the quality of nursing service.

Dr. Tan says one proof of the decline is falling pass percentage in nursing licensure examinations since 1994. (See Table I, from the Professional Regulation Commission Table 1, showing the passing percentages from the June 12, 2001, licensure exam to the June 12, 2006, exam.) LINK to continue story:

http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2006/aug/06/yehey/top_stories/20060806top1.html

But I do not agree with the above statement at all. At the root of the problem is the training that the nurses are getting there now. Period. The clinical skills are sorely lacking and to state that the NLE is one of the best as well as one of the toughest, is definitely not the case either. We all know that.

Perhaps they should focus on the schools there that are multiplying like little mice and are only interested in how much money that they can make. Do not see one official focusing on that. Soon it is going to be almost impossible for any of you to get a job overseas. Poor training makes it harder for a facility to wish to employ anyone from an area, and we are seeing it more and more.

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