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What are differences in job duties of a RPN/LPN in Canada vs. the U.S.?
I just completed my education in Canada, so I have no experience as an employee yet. I am considering working in the U.S. for 10 years or less, and then possibly returning to Canada to continue working as a LPN. Would Canadian hospitals want to hire me if my LPN experience was in the U.S. only? Would they not hire me in a hospital because they would think that I had lost my skills?
You really need to let us know what visa you are planning on using to live and work in the US. Are you already a US Citizen? Are you planning on marrying a US citizen otherwise as a LPN you do not meet work permit/visa or immigrant visa requirements so moot point trying to think how Canadian employers will feel about US experience
Let me put it this way.
I was a new grad LPN in a large metro area in Florida. The only job I could find was in LTC working part-time for $18 an hour with NO benefits....meaning...I had NO health insurance. That's right NO health insurance. And I was lucky to find that job, I networked my way into that job through a college class I was taking...I met the unit managers in class.
I was going to school for RN, I would have been lucky to find a part-time job paying $22 an hour with NO benefits.
I'm much happier to be back in Alberta...everything is far better...except the winter weather.
As for getting back my PR....I'd have to apply, pay a bunch of money, explain why I want to move back, and then wait for at least a year for an answer. Sure I'd have priority over new PR seekers but I'd still be waiting.
There's a reason why I never took US citizenship.
So OP, you'd be better off looking for a job in the US if you had an in demand NAFTA skill.....like some kind of oil and gas engineer.
Especially now. Terrible economy, no union in most places, low pay, call offs, mandatory overtime, firing at will. Sign me up for all that! Seriously....you can't work without a visa, and even if you could, is it worth all that?Just asking this question, but why on earth would you want to live/work in the US?
My mom is a PR in arizona and even though she has been around for 20 yrs there she still had to hunt for a new job... I used to be a PR and came back to canada at 20yrs old.. U can go down to study but u cant work unless its at school.. U can get licensing no prob.. Its the visa aspect unless you are planning on a border town.. Good luck amd i dont think anyone was trying to be rude.. In typing some ppl's way of conversation doesnt come across as it was meant..
studentnurse1989
34 Posts
Thanks AngelicDarkness. :) I know that recognition is important to many people, and that's completely understandable, but I have other reasons for possibly wanting to move there. The weather is one.
I was wondering whether Canadian hospitals would want to hire me if I wanted to return at some point? My education was completed in Canada, but I would have maybe 10 years of experience as an LPN in the U.S., and no experience in Canada. Do you think Canadian hospitals would be very likely to hire me on a med-surg floor if my experience was on a similar floor in the U.S.? Or would they think that I had lost some of my skills? (Considering that an LPN's scope of practice is different in the U.S.)
Thank you!! :)