Posted on 12/12/2004 12:23:44 AM PST by nickcarraway
TWO congressmen Saturday urged the government to ask the United States to reconsider a policy to stop processing work permits for Filipino and other foreign nurses beginning Jan. 1 next year.
The labor and foreign affairs departments have to act fast and negotiate the opening of new labor markets for Filipino nurses and other overseas Filipino workers, said Representatives Roseller Barinaga (NPC, Zamboanga del Norte), chair of the House committee on labor and employment, and Lorna Silverio (Lakas, Bulacan), chair of the committee on interparliamentary relations and service.
A US state department bulletin said that starting Jan. 1, 2005, the US government will not be processing applications for work permits filed after January 2002. This means that the usual 60-day wait for approval could now drag on for years.
Barinaga said the US decision would have serious repercussions on the country, which has long been a major source of nurses for hospitals in the US, Canada and the Middle
"It's a major blow to the country which is known for producing highly-trained nurses. It's so sudden. We should have been given enough time to deal with it considering that many of our nurses have pending applications," he said.
Barinaga said the government should express to the US its "deep concern and objection to its policy," or ask that it exempt Filipino nurses from the restriction "since our local nurses are highly qualified to work in US hospitals."
Why?
Highly educated and skilled people are being barred?
Low life Law Breakers crossing our Borders under the cover of Darkness are being welcomed?
Someone help me here.
I can't help you because I don't get it either.
Nursing wages are not low at all right now. However, I do understand why the US government may be cutting off the applications. They have THOUSANDS literally. Exactly how many nurses does the US need from the Philippines?
BTW, they're trying to recruit more male nurses. A man who wants to go to nursing school can get admitted pretty easy right now.
Yep. There are lots of nursing jobs...I imagine that the US gov't office has more applications for them from overseas than they can handle.
Being a nursing student myself I have a suggestion. Why not increase the nurse training programs available. Where I am at school there are about 130 applicants per year to get into the program. These are people who have all met the qualifications and have good GPAs. Of that number they take 35. That is due to the fact that that is all the program can train per year. Why not create more programs if there is a nursing shortage?
Why would we turn the applicants down?
I question this article, it is not well sourced, there are no Congress Critter names and it seems only to serve as a wedge for those that are Phillipino challenged.
Pino Power!
TT
I am also suspicious of this article. ping foolscap's post also #10
GOOD POINT... at my local community college the nursing program is highly competative because of the limited seats. Having a high GPA doesn't even really cut it.
I'm thinking maybe one nurse for every Filipino soldier in the international coalition.
Oh okay *lol*
apparently the president of the philippines doesnt have any blackmail tapes on george bush like elpresidente fox does
Ah there's the rub
Facts About the Nursing Shortage
HONOR SOCIETY OF NURSING, SIGMA THETA TAU INTERNATIONAL
JULY 2001
Introduction: The Growing Need for Nurses
Underlying Causes: The Changing Reality of Nursing
Hospital acuity
Declining enrollments
Baby boom bubble
Frequently Asked Questions About the Nursing Shortage
Is it a shortage or just an increased demand for certain specialties?
What's driving the nursing shortage?
Will we see a salary war?
How is this shortage different from the previous shortages?
Is the shortage an international problem?
Have any studies been done on the shortage?
More Key Facts on the Nursing Shortage
Recommendations
Resources on the Nursing Shortage
Introduction: The Growing Need for Nurses
Just as the legion of baby boomers is about to swell the need for quality health care, America's nursing population is aging and more nurses are moving into primary care settings. The result: America's hospitals and other institutions need more nurses, especially those who deliver specialized care.
Front-page newspaper stories paint a picture of a nursing shortage born of increased patient loads and escalating pressure to treat more people, more quickly, for less money. Second, highly visible patient and professional complaints about managed care in the early 1990s have discouraged young people from entering the nursing profession. These complaints have led many guidance counselors to advise students not to enter the profession. Just as the health care needs of an aging population are increasing, some segments of the public are encouraging students to choose alternative careers.
Underlying Causes: The Changing Reality of Nursing
While shortages have occurred in health care throughout history, and especially since World War II, experts are finding that the developing nursing shortage is uniquely serious. It is considered both a supply and a demand shortage, combining a broad range of issues that include: steep population growth in several states, a diminishing pipeline of new students to nursing, an aging workforce and a baby boom bubble that will require intense health care services. These issues are occurring just as the majority of nurses are retiring and job opportunities within health care are expanding.
The shortage is worldwide. Already Canada, the Philippines, Australia and Western Europe are reporting significant nursing shortages. Reports of shortages are also coming from Africa and South America.
Hospital acuity
Acuity in hospitals has been rising rapidly, due to the declining average length of stay and to new technology that allows rapid assessment, treatment and discharge. Hospitals are increasingly becoming large intensive care units, with cardiac monitoring, respiratory assistance and intense treatment a growing part of the average patient's plan of care. Thus, skilled and specialized nurses are in great demand.
Declining enrollments
Complicating matters is the fact that hospitals are increasingly looking for nurses with at least a baccalaureate degree, and enrollment in baccalaureate programs is on the decline. According to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing, entry-level BSN enrollment fell 2.1 percent in fall 2000, dropping for the sixth year in a row.
Baby boom bubble
The baby boom of 1946 to 1964 was followed by the 11-year baby bust, when the birth rate fell to a low of 146 births per 1,000. As of the 1990 census, there were 77 million American boomers compared with just 44 million Generation Xers, creating the smallest pool of entry-level workers since the 1930s. Now employers must worry about finding enough good people for needed positions. This holds true in health care and specifically nursing. Projections from the U.S. Census Bureau show as one generation grows and the other shrinks, the boomer-to-buster ratio may fall from 1.74 in 1990 to 1.6 in 2010.
Frequently Asked Questions About the Nursing Shortage
# Is it a shortage or just an increased demand for certain specialties?
It's both. Health care organizations say it's both a demand and a supply shortage. Experienced nurses in key specialties are in short supply, but so are nurses in just about every arena. Shortages are regional, but intense.
# What's driving the nursing shortage?
The shortage is caused by a wide range of factors including:
* Growing demand. During the nation's economic slump, many people put off getting health care because of financial troubles or a lack of insurance. With the economy up, so is the demand.
* Without the new graduate pipeline, there are fewer nurses available to replace those who retire or leave for other opportunities. Currently, the ratio of RNs in their 40s to RNs in their 20s is four to one.
* Lower baccalaureate enrollment. In fall 2000, entry-level BSN enrollment fell by 2.1 percent, dropping for the sixth year in a row, according to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing.
* Higher hospital census and greater acuity. Modifications in managed care and a new push for competitive quality is increasing patient days, hours of nursing care and the recognition of the role of the RN.
# Will we see a salary war?
Probably. Already, sign-on bonuses up to $14,000 are being offered and some hospitals are advertising significant salary increases for key specialties, such as intensive care. In allied health, pharmacists, nuclear medical technicians and respiratory therapists are in short supply and can command impressive salaries.
# How is this shortage different from the previous shortages?
Unlike the shortage of the 1980s, this one is not about sheer numbers of nurses, but about having nurses with the needed specialties, skills and experience. Nurses are in particular demand if they can lead multidisciplinary teams, serve as patient educators and managers of care across the continuum, or demonstrate a high level of skill in the operating room, recovery room, emergency room, intensive care unit, critical care unit, pediatrics, newborn intensive care unit, pediatric intensive care unit, and labor and delivery.
# Is the shortage an international problem?
Yes. Several other countries report problems similar to the United States. The Toronto Star reported in June 2001 that Ontario, Canada, expects to lose 14,000 of its 81,000 nurses due to retirement by 2004. Almost a third of Canada's nurses are over age 50, and only 10 percent are under 30. In December 2000, the World Health Organization reported that 10 years ago Poland was graduating more than 10,000 new nurses annually. That figure has fallen to 3,000. And in Chile, out of 18,000 nurses in the country, only 8,000 are working in the field.
# Have any studies been done on the shortage?
Yes. A study by Peter Buerhaus, PhD, RN, Douglas Staiger, PhD, and David Auerback, MS, was published in the June 14, 2000 Journal of the American Medical Association. The study reveals:
* Between 1983 and 1998 the average age of working RNs increased by 4.5 years to 41.9.
* Thirty-five percent fewer full-time RNs are observed today when compared to similar age groups of RNs entering the workforce 20 years ago.
* Within 10 years, 40 percent of working RNs will be 50 years or older.
* As those RNs retire, the supply of working RNs is projected to be 20 percent below requirements by the year 2020.
Another survey released in early 1999 found the nursing shortage is due to an increased demand for experienced RNs in specialized areas. The survey, sponsored by the American Organization of Nurse Executives and the American Nurses Association also found:
* Urban hospitals reported that filling nursing vacancies was significantly more difficult.
* Small hospitals experienced increased difficulty in recruiting obstetrics nurses, and the time to recruit them has substantially increased.
* Larger and urban facilities reported increased use of agency and contract nurses.
More Key Facts on the Nursing Shortage...
* The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that jobs for RNs will grow 23 percent by 2008. That's faster than the average for all other occupations.
* About half of the RN workforce will reach retirement age in the next 15 years.
* The average age of new RN graduates is 31. They are entering the profession at an older age and will have fewer years to work than nurses traditionally have had.
* RN enrollments in schools of nursing are down. In fall 2000, entry-level BSN enrollment fell by 2.1 percent, dropping for the sixth year in a row, according to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing.
I think they mean Congress in the Philippines. They do mention the names: Representatives Roseller Barinaga and Lorna Silverio.
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