Close X
Monday, November 18, 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

753 COVID19 cases for Thursday

753 COVID19 cases for Thursday
There have been 135 cases of the Omicron variant of concern identified in B.C. Fraser Health says in a statement 23 COVID-19 cases were identified among staff and students at Khalsa School Old Yale Road.    

753 COVID19 cases for Thursday

Expert says 2021 a weather year like no other

Expert says 2021 a weather year like no other
There are no happy visions of snow-covered slopes on the 2021 list. Just death, destruction and drought. Consider late June's heat dome in Western Canada, the top pick by Phillips for the year.

Expert says 2021 a weather year like no other

Pandemic drives busiest year for CRA watchdog

Pandemic drives busiest year for CRA watchdog
Taxpayers ombudsperson François Boileau says gaining a larger profile would also help him reach the more than 800,000 people who don't file returns and are often from vulnerable populations that don't usually file complaints.    

Pandemic drives busiest year for CRA watchdog

Trudeau gives cabinet ministers their to-do lists

Trudeau gives cabinet ministers their to-do lists
Trudeau's new mandate letters to the 38 members of cabinet were published online Thursday and they show that ending the fight against COVID-19 remains the top priority across government.

Trudeau gives cabinet ministers their to-do lists

Omicron spread must be slowed: health experts

Omicron spread must be slowed: health experts
Canada's chief public health officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, wrote in an annual report on the state of public health in the country that the pandemic has exposed long-standing cracks in the system.

Omicron spread must be slowed: health experts

Bitter cold, snow forecast for parts of B.C.

Bitter cold, snow forecast for parts of B.C.
Special weather statements have been issued by Environment Canada including the Cariboo, West Columbia and Williston regions, with a prediction of 10 to 20 centimetres of snow starting Friday night.

Bitter cold, snow forecast for parts of B.C.