Published
I think the problem is more of the training of US nursing programs vs International nursing programs. The issue goes both ways. Foreign nurses have a hard time getting a US license because they are specialists in nursing, so they are missing classes and clinicals (ex. OB). US trained nurses are generalists which means they don't have enough training in a specialty that foreign nurses have.
It all goes on hours clinical and theory as well as meet a certain time period (3 years)
The programme should be three years in length (or equivalent) and contain a minimum
of 500 hours of clinical practice which must be evidenced by a transcript of training
from the applicant’s higher education institution.
The programme must have included theoretical and practical instruction in:
• general and specialist medicine
• general and specialist surgery
• childcare and pediatrics
• maternity (obstetric) care
• mental health and psychiatry
• care of the elderly, and
• community/primary care nursing.
Last time I looked the uk training was over 2000 hours both clinical and theory. Would accelerated cover the same hours? Each application is accessed individually and we have had some post they was accepted with less hours and others say they was denied. The NMC has just changed the process for IEN who trained outside the EU
Here's a link to the most current information: http://www.nmc-uk.org/Documents/Registration/Registering%20as%20a%20nurse%20or%20midwife%20from%20outside%20EU%20or%20EEA.pdf
sunshinerainbows
55 Posts
I already have a non-nursing bachelor's degree from a university in the US. I'd like to change careers and get a BSN. I could do an accelerated program but I am afraid it wont be recognized internationally.
The problem: Even if I do a "traditional" program, I will transfer in so many credit hours that the program is still only two years, which deep down in some thread someone was saying isn't recognized anywhere either because it's all about the time you spend in the program (at least for immigration/official people), and two years doesn't compare to three or four. I don't understand why since the program I am looking at, students don't start nursing classes until their third year anyway.
Anyone have any experience with shorter programs being recognized? This person was saying that EVERYWHERE outside the US, ONLY four year degrees are recognized. I feel like that can't be true. There's no way in order to have a well recognized degree, I need to spend another two years taking gen eds.