Re: Nursing Practice in the Philippines
As long as people are willing to pay tuition for programs that they are not going to be able to use, you are going to see an increase in the number of unemployed nurses that are there.
It has nothing to do with the government making changes to the needs of the facilities, the issue is that there are many more nurses than they can use, and this is nothing new. It is just that it has gotten out of hand.
632,000 in school less than two years ago and now 950,000 enrolled this year in nursing school.
There is no work available even in other countries, there has always been a limit as to how many can go overseas according to the visas that are available. Cut down significantly the number that will actually graduate and then only about 44% pass the NLE, and that is now required for almost all other countries as well as actual work experience. Completing a training program or a volunteer program in a hospital is not accepted by most either.
And it is no longer three to five years for the US, more like greater than five years and increasing. The number of visas has not increased but the number of applicants far exceeds what is available per year. And if someone wishes to go into nursing at this point, it should not be with the goal of going to work in the US as those chances are getting slimmer and slimmer as time goes on.
None of the other professions are being well compensated in your country either, that is why many have gone into nursing now as second coursers, or a way to get to the US quickly with the green card, but that is definitely not the case.
This is why that it is so important that any that are going into nursing now need to understand that it is not going to be easy for them to get a job in the field when they are done.
As long as people are willing to pay for these programs, then the schools are going to keep opening.
Things should start with nurses protesting about the poor training first of all that we are seeing now from quite a few of the bad programs that are still there and functioning.
Nursing News