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Lvn/lpn



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Jan 31, 2008 09:25 PM

Lvn/lpn


hello! is there LPN/LVN here? or PN grads?

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12 Comments
No. 1
Old Feb 02, 2008, 09:20 AM

Default Re: Lvn/lpn
Originally Posted by shinobuchan View Post
hello! is there LPN/LVN here? or PN grads?
I'm an under grad. You got questions?
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No. 2
Old Feb 04, 2008, 09:45 PM

Default Re: Lvn/lpn
Originally Posted by micdelrosario View Post
I'm an under grad. You got questions?
where do u go to school? actually, im a PN grad.
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No. 3
from bambini
Old Feb 06, 2008, 11:28 PM

Default Re: Lvn/lpn
pinoy LPN present!
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No. 4
Old Feb 10, 2008, 08:57 AM

Default Re: Lvn/lpn
Originally Posted by shinobuchan View Post
where do u go to school? actually, im a PN grad.
KISS undergrad. do you have an employer yet? what country are you aiming for?
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No. 5
from suzanne4
Old Feb 11, 2008, 12:26 PM

Default Re: Lvn/lpn
For those of you that are new here, please be aware that most other countries will not accept the LPN/LVN for immigration purposes. A license does not permit one to work, and that requires a visa to do so.

In the US, there is no way to get a visa legally to work. If you do not already have a green card or are a US citizen, there is no way that you will be able to work here; no matter what your school has told you.

You may here mention of the H2-B visa, but that is for unskilled workers only and cannot be used in nursing, and leaves you open to being deported for immigration fraud.

Please take the time to do some reading here.
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No. 6
Old Feb 13, 2008, 06:20 AM

Default Re: Lvn/lpn
some of my friends (also PN grads) are waiting for their interview at US embassy.

They told me that they will be flying to Florida soon. BUt they need to study 3 months there and then after that, they will take the nclex Pn exam there. it is a requirement for them to study there. I think they've paid the agency around USD 1200 for their studies and housing there.

They told me they'll be leaving last month. But until now, they are all still here.
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No. 7
Old Feb 13, 2008, 07:18 AM

Default Re: Lvn/lpn
Originally Posted by shinobuchan View Post
some of my friends (also PN grads) are waiting for their interview at US embassy.

They told me that they will be flying to Florida soon. BUt they need to study 3 months there and then after that, they will take the nclex Pn exam there. it is a requirement for them to study there. I think they've paid the agency around USD 1200 for their studies and housing there.

They told me they'll be leaving last month. But until now, they are all still here.
Immigration requires RN and will need vsc and currently there are no visas, all foreign trained nurses unless they receive visa via another route ie marriage require VSC which ensures you meet US requirements and if you don't receive VSC then you will not get a work visa. There is no shortage in the US of LPN's. This does not sound right, there is no reason to go to the US and study there.
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No. 8
from suzanne4
Old Feb 13, 2008, 08:09 AM

Default Re: Lvn/lpn
Originally Posted by shinobuchan View Post
some of my friends (also PN grads) are waiting for their interview at US embassy.

They told me that they will be flying to Florida soon. BUt they need to study 3 months there and then after that, they will take the nclex Pn exam there. it is a requirement for them to study there. I think they've paid the agency around USD 1200 for their studies and housing there.

They told me they'll be leaving last month. But until now, they are all still here.
I do not care what your friends have told you, what they are doing is 100% illegal as there are no visas available for LPNs to work in the US. If they do not have a green card or are already a US citizen, then they cannot work. There are no visas legally issued for those with the LPN license, we do not have a shortage of them in the US, and there are areas where they are being phased out all together. An agency may be trying to bring them in illegally, and they will get caught and they will get deported for a period of ten years after their stay in immigration detention, which is essentially attached to the federal prisons. They can say all that they want, but the agency is just selling them essentially as slaves and nothing more. That is not how things are done in the US.

You can also contact the US Embassy in Manila and they will tell you the same thing. LPNs do not qualify for the H2-B visa as they are not unskilled workers and they also need to have a VSC before they can work in the US, even if they had the visa. And without it, they are doing everything illegal, and sorry, deserve to be deported.

They know well in advance as to what they are doing.
It does not matter how many times that we post this, but there are always going to be those that think that the rules in the US do not apply to them and then they get caught. And sent home.

Another thing to consider, your friends are going to be placed in nursing homes, if they do get over here. And those get raided all of the time because of the status of many that work there, in particular Florida and CA, so you will be seeing them at home very soon.

Sorry, but they are making a very stupid mistake that can cost them their safety.
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No. 9
from suzanne4
Old Feb 13, 2008, 08:12 AM

Default Re: Lvn/lpn
There have already been multiple threads on this topic and things have not changed. The issue comes down to the fact that you have unscrupulous school owners there that will tell you anything and members of the PRC that have no idea of what they are doing and permit these schools to even open and train.

Why in the world would someone spend a year in school in a country that does not even accept the training for licensure in the first place? That at the top of the list makes no sense at all.

Suggest that you pay a visit to the US Embassy and get their take on the subject.
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