Re: Volunteer Nurses: Counted as a Work Experience?
I am a new nurse training at a private hospital in Mindanao. I paid a small amount for two months of training, which also includes IV therapy training and (once I complete my cases

) licensure. After our training, the hospital shall absorb us trainees (or the best of us, at least) to fill in the vacant nursing positions ( :crosses fingers to get the position at the ICU: ) so I don't feel so bad about my status.
Volunteerism in itself is a good thing. But I've always thought that volunteerism is done out of willingness to serve others, not for the self-serving purpose of getting job experience for the almighty $$$, otherwise you end up with "volunteers" who don't want to be working here at all.
I do agree that this sort of "volunteerism" is a huge problem. I believe that it is not only an issue of "slave labor", but a reflection of the sorry state of nursing in the Philippines. We wouldn't be in this situation, after all, if we didn't allow it to happen. There are simply too many of us Filipino nurses and not enough health care institutions to take us in so new nurses get desperate and offer their hard earned skills for free (otherwise, they'd stay idle and rot). Remember the Law of Supply and Demand? When the supply exceeds the demand, there is a surplus and the price of the commodity decreases.
Well, congratulations! The supply of Pinoy RNs has just exceeded the demand so much that the value of the new RN has just dropped down to zero (negative, even, in some cases including mine >.>)! Damn, how hard did I work and how much did I pay for my license again?
Bottom line is that RNs should be fairly compensated. And if we must volunteer, we should be doing it because we want to, not because it's our only choice. So what can we do to achieve that? Well, I believe we could start by trimming out poorly performing nursing schools (RA 9173's standards for nursing schools are horribly low IMO :P), banning hospitals from accepting volunteers, increase the quality of nursing care we give, increase nurses' salaries, and simply speak out about the issues which surround us every day in the workplace. Now if only the Philippine government ever listened to us... :P
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