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Nursing shortages Baby boomers and the immigrant nurse Part 2

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Quote from madwife2002Now what we really should investigate is when we say ‘foreign nurses’ who are we really referring to? Are we referring to Green Card holder? Or are we referring to foreign born and trained RN’s? Is there a difference I hear you contemplating?

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Thanks Atheos for opening the debate I love playing devils advocat and enjoy a good debate

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Ok, my question is why are they complaining about foreign nurses taking all the nursing jobs, while a nursing shortage is still evident? That really makes no sense.

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Nursing shortage?Really?Are you not seeing all the threads about nurses that can't get a job?

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The question is...is there really a nursing shortage? YES. I think there is... and it is not Isolated in the US only. Do i think that there just happens to be more nurses that are picking up shifts, or going back to work because their spouse was laid off....YES. But this is temporary, and once the recession is over then there will be a lot more nurses retiring,or cutting back hours. Do i think that the nursing shortage will be greatest in the next five years...ABSOLUTELY When all the baby boomers retire. Do i think that that the US should try to hire there own nurses first... Sure. My question is, how many nurses who take a shift are working short staffed as we speak?

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I agree there is still a nursing shortage but due to the financial crisis hospitals are tightening their belts before the crunch really hits, as I doubt we have really seen the highest point yet. Many hospitals are making their staff spread further, not employing staff when employees leave but still expecting the same high quality and not understanding that staff are stretched to the limit. The management dont care at the moment how staff are treated because In Phoenix the management has the upper hand again and nurses are 10 a penny. So basically you lose one there are a lot to take their place. The attitude where I work is you dont like the way it is, there is the door, I have even heard us told that we are very lucky to have a job. These kind of statements make staff feel vunerable and employees toe the line.Many staff at my work have been their long term and dont want to find other employment starting all over again in their career. So again the management know this and have the upper hand.I have noticed that staff are complaining less out loud, but mumbling in corners. A very negative erosive environment

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although an immigrant nurse, i dont see myself as one. i see big differences between the way american nurses think and act and talk, but feel part of the working team. but other immigrant nurses who come from other countries certainly act and speak in a different way to me, the problem with the area that i live in, is not just the economy which is hurting the hospitals, but there are many nursing schools which are churning out loads of new grads who are all looking to get jobs in this area. this is hurting the area's economy as nurses are finding more and more difficulty getting new jobs if they want to move. so its not just immigrant nurses who are hurting the job situation.

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That is very true, professors and school are telling them to go ahead down this career path and that there is a shortage.

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Well I was not born in the United States, but I am a naturalized US Citizen, my country is now the United States, where I live, where my family lives, where my friends and fellow Americans live, and the same is for the permanent residents of the United States (Green card Holders) who will live and work all their lives in the US.I have worked hard and earned my position with lots of tears, if I hadn't become a nurse I would still be living in the United States regardless, still working here. Working as what ? Maybe I would frying nuggets at McDonalds, sweeping the floors of a local mall (Nothing wrong with people who this, we need them too) ? Is this what I deserve because I have an accent or a tanned skin ? Should I be a second class american citizen ? Is not America that land of opportunity for everybody, the land that has attracted people from all over the world for centuries ?. It is Immigration that has made America stronger, since its early beginnings with the pelgrims. So in my personal battle, I had to decide to stay at MC D's frying nuggets or become a nurse ? So I became an RN, then recently became a Doctor, now in the process to apply for a residency in Surgery. I will live in the States no matter what I work, I've decided to give america my best and serve its people, and also make a better life for me and my family. Think about this ? If you are an US born american having the job of hiring nurses, would you hire me ? Or would you hire an RN who is your cousin or your bother in law ? You'd definitely be very tempted to hire him over me, unless you need me. I don't think this foreigners are taking anyone's job, the country itself need this input of foreign nurses as well as the american nurses. But I may be wrong.... This is just my humble thoughts.

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Very well put Danger S! Well i guess from reading prior posts even from different areas it seems that many nurse grads are experiencing difficulty with finding work. I am reading about this all the time. It was not easy for me when i graduated in 1995 in Canada. There was no work for new grads and i remember many lay offs during that time. I worked as a sitter in an retirement home because i couldn't find work as an RN. I took a job in TEXAS because i wanted to start to get experience as an RN. It was very difficult for me even coming from Canada. I had to learn how to function as an independent nurse, and understand my patients who many of them only spoke Spanish. My advice for new grads is to get the experience they need even if it means moving out of your own town. I can't emphasize the importance of getting the experience, and being able to relocate if you have to. It will put you one step ahead of the competition.

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Thanks Danger. All with you in this thought process. I wish if I could put a little bit of my accent to this post but you said it same I would said it. I am going for my MSN and hopefully later for PhD and I do not think I took anybodies job))

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I am a Japanese citizen who has done all nursing training and RN licensing in the US while paying almost five times the going rate for coursework. I find myself increasingly frustrated with the seemingly impossible and expensive task of legally acquiring a green card. At the same time, I read of granting comparatively easy amnesty to 12-20 million ILLEGAL aliens who are living and working in the country. Obama's plan to educate US citizens as nurses suffers from lack of classrooms, facilities, available teachers, and time to keep up with the "Boomers".
Author: alice  3-06-2015, 16:38   Views: 971   
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