Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. announces new program to recruit nurses

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Apr, 2022 01:51 PM
  • B.C. announces new program to recruit nurses

VANCOUVER - British Columbia is looking to other places to solve its nursing shortage, starting with financial support to help internationally trained nurses get registered and licensed faster.

The Health Ministry says some nurses trained outside the country can wait years to get registered and licensed as their credentials are assessed and their English language skills are tested.

The province will provide a maximum of $16,000 to about 1,500 internationally educated nurses to pay for everything from application fees to English language testing and education upgrading.

So-called nurse navigators will support them through the assessment and recruitment process as part of a $12-million initiative.

Health Minister Adrian Dix says B.C. will also launch a marketing campaign across Canada and in other countries in order to recruit nurses to a province where the population is growing and aging faster than in other Canadian jurisdictions.

He says a provincial recruitment agency called Health Match BC will manage the bursaries and help hire nurse navigators to streamline a process that has been too complex.

MORE National ARTICLES

Victoria set to reassign police as Omicron surges

Victoria set to reassign police as Omicron surges
A statement from the department says, for the first time, it is enacting a clause in its contract with its police union that allows for the potential assignment of all officers to front-line duties.

Victoria set to reassign police as Omicron surges

Pandemic causing staffing worries in key sectors

Pandemic causing staffing worries in key sectors
In addition to the health-care sector, police forces in Edmonton, Calgary and Winnipeg are facing similar staffing problems, as is Winnipeg Transit and the fire department in Prince Rupert in northwestern British Columbia.

Pandemic causing staffing worries in key sectors

Tam COVID cases four times as high as third-wave peak

Tam COVID cases four times as high as third-wave peak
Tam says the average daily case count rose 65 per cent from last week, with an average of close to 42,000 cases being reported daily over the past seven days up to Wednesday.

Tam COVID cases four times as high as third-wave peak

Canadian economy added 55K jobs in December

Canadian economy added 55K jobs in December
The Canadian economy added 55,000 jobs in December before COVID-19 cases began spiking at the end of the month, prompting public health restrictions that forced many businesses to close or curtail operations.

Canadian economy added 55K jobs in December

Pediatrician urges parents to have the COVID talk

Pediatrician urges parents to have the COVID talk
A pediatrician who has researched COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among parents in Canada, the United States and Israel is urging people concerned about getting their children vaccinated to talk to a health-care provider as the Omicron variant pushes cases to all-time highs.

Pediatrician urges parents to have the COVID talk

Long-term residents left without visits: advocate

Long-term residents left without visits: advocate
British Columbia's seniors advocate is asking the province to designate one person as an essential visitor for every long-term care resident as the facilities move to stem the spread of COVID-19. Isobel Mackenzie says in a news release that the need to limit visitors has left a majority of long-term care residents without visits from loved ones.    

Long-term residents left without visits: advocate