Quebec's nurses order rejects call to delay spring exam despite concern over fall failure rate - Action News
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Quebec's nurses order rejects call to delay spring exam despite concern over fall failure rate

Quebec's order of nurses is rejecting a recommendation to push back the date of its next licensing exam amid an ongoing investigation into why more than half of candidates failed the last sitting.

Nursing students will be given option to wait until next date in September

Two health-care workers in blue scrubs are seen in a hospital hallway.
The order said Thursday that the next exam will go ahead on March 27 as scheduled, but nursing students will be given the option to wait until the next date in September if they prefer. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Quebec's order of nurses is rejecting a recommendation to push back the date of its next licensing exam amid an ongoing investigation into why more than half of candidates failed the last sitting.

The order, known by its French acronymthe OIIQ, said Thursday that the next exam will go ahead on March 27 as scheduled, but nursing students will be given the option to wait until the next date in September if they prefer.

The commissioner who oversees access to the province's professional orders said last week that it was still too early to explain last fall's abnormally high failure rate.

Andr Garipyrecommended the next date to write the exam be pushed back while he continues his probe into what happened.

In an interview with Radio-Canada's Tout un matin Thursday morning,OIIQpresident Luc Mathieu said the postponement of the exam to an indefinite date was not an option.

"People in health care say, well, we need nurses who can practise fully," he said.

"Someone who is only a candidate for the practice of the profession, they requirecloser supervision and [they] can't practise in certain health-care domains everything consideredcritical care such as emergency or intensive care."

While the order declined to change the date of the exam, it agreed to Garipy's suggestion of allowing students who had failed for a third and normally final time to retake the test.

Thisexemption will count only for the students who failed the last sitting, Mathieu clarified.

Garipy's interim report found that just 45.4 per cent of nursing students passed the Sept. 26 licensing exam, compared to a pass rate of between 63 and 96 per cent in previous sittings.

Gariepy said nursing students have largely blamed what they see as flaws in the exam, while the order of nurses has suggested student preparation mayhave been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

with files from Radio-Canada's Tout un matin