Close X
Saturday, September 21, 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

Women sexually assaulted near Metrotown

Women sexually assaulted near Metrotown
The incident was reported to police and RCMP were actively investigating when RCMP received two additional reports of similar assaults on women in the Metrotown area. The second and third incidents happened around 9 a.m. on Friday, April 1.

Women sexually assaulted near Metrotown

Updated federal vaccine mandate coming Wednesday

Updated federal vaccine mandate coming Wednesday
The Public Service Alliance of Canada has already filed a grievance against the existing policy which requires all federal public service members to be fully vaccinated even if they work at home.

Updated federal vaccine mandate coming Wednesday

New climate change report 'sobering:' Guilbeault

New climate change report 'sobering:' Guilbeault
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change urges more aggressive cuts to greenhouse-gas emissions to limit global warming to the 1.5 degrees in the 2015 Paris Accord.

New climate change report 'sobering:' Guilbeault

Feds ease foreign workers rules amid labour crunch

Feds ease foreign workers rules amid labour crunch
Higher-wage, highly skilled workers will also be able to secure three years of employment eligibility instead of two, which the government says would also give them an easier path to permanent residency.

Feds ease foreign workers rules amid labour crunch

High waves, deep snow arrive in latest B.C. storm

High waves, deep snow arrive in latest B.C. storm
The weather office warned of dangerous storm surges on Monday as west winds gust to 100 kilometres per hour. The agency said the winds could send waves of up to 12 metres "crashing onshore" during the height of the storm.

High waves, deep snow arrive in latest B.C. storm

BC Premier John Horgan tests positive for COVID19

BC Premier John Horgan tests positive for COVID19
Horgan says his symptoms are mild and he is isolating and working from home. He recently underwent treatment of his throat cancer and was back in his office in January.

BC Premier John Horgan tests positive for COVID19