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U.S.-trained nurse practitioner from N.L. wants province to cut licensing red tape

Nurse practitioner Julie Kane would like Newfoundland and Labrador to cut the red tape for internationally trained nurses to get licensed.

College of Registered Nurses says it's trying to cut red tape, but few internationally trained nurses in N.L.

Woman standing in an office and smiling with her hand on her hip.
Julie Kane, a nurse practitioner originally from Elliston in Newfoundland and Labrador, wants to work at home on the Bonavista Peninsula. (Submitted by Julie Kane)

In 2018, nurse practitioner Julie Kane bought her great-grandmother's house in Elliston, on Newfoundland's Bonavista Peninsula, with dreams to move home from Alaska with her husband, who is also a nurse, and work in the region.

But Kane says the process to get licensed to work as a nurse practitionerhas been making it difficult to turn her dream into reality.

"It's just beenwhat I would considerbarrier after barrier," Kane said from the office of Trua Health and Wellness, ahealth clinic she owns inAnchorage.

There is a shortage of health-care workers in the province, whichhasforced the closure of some rural emergency rooms this summer andcreated lengthy wait times for patients in the ER.

The province'smedical association estimatesabout 125,000 people in the province don't have access to a family doctor.

Kane who was born in Newfoundland and studied to become a registered nurse in the province would like to see the process to get licensed as a nurse practitioner modernized and streamlined to cut down on red tape.

Commerical sign on a lawn in front of a building for the Trua Health and Wellness clinic.
Kane offers primary care and other services at Trua Health and Wellness, a clinic she owns in Alaska. (Submitted by Julie Kane)

Kane moved to the United States in 1998 because there were fewfull-time nursing jobs in the province at the time. She said she came back to the province to work as a registered nurse for a stint in the early 2000s before returning to the U.S.

Kane said she became a nurse practitioner in 2017 after graduating from an online master's of nursing program at Illinois-based Chamberlain University and passing a board exam to get licensed in the United States.

"Since then I've been working full time as a nurse practitioner. I also worked part time in the Alaska National Guard," she said.

In order to work as a nurse practitioner in Newfoundland and Labrador, Kane said she firsthad to get licensed as a registered nurse a process she said took six months to a year.

Kane's RN licence was approved last month and now she has to go through a second process to get licensed as a nurse practitioner, but she said she doesn't know how long itwill take.

Kane says she works part time as a nurse practitioner with the Alaska National Guard. (Submitted by Julie Kane)

Because Kane studied to become a nurse practitioner outside Canada, the College of Registered Nurses of Newfoundland and Labrador says it has to assess her education to ensure it meets Canadian standards before they can authorize her to write theCanadian nurse practitioner exam. The exam is required for licensing and is held twice a year, in May and October.

Kane also saidshe's been told it would be easier to first get licensed as a nurse practitioner in another province. Kane said she has decided to try to get licensed in Ontario and transfer the credentials to Newfoundland and Labrador because Ontario's regulator will accept her American licensing exam.

Still, she saidthe process could involve English language proficiency tests and thousands in registration and application fees.

"I don't feel like I should need to go through other provinces to get a job in Newfoundland," she said.

Kane said it was easy to transfer her nursing credentials to the U.S. in the 1990s and she believes the process could be simplified because theeducation programs in both countries are similar.

"I shouldn't have to fill out paper forms anymore," she said, adding she believesit would also be beneficial to have someone to help guide applicants through the complicated process.

"I thought it would be easier for me to move back home."

Few internationally trained nurses in N.L.

Lynn Power, executive director of the College of Registered Nurses of Newfoundland Labrador,says the college is trying to cut through the red tape for people trying to get a nursing licencein AtlanticCanada.

"We only started nurse practitioner practice in Newfoundland and Labrador in 1998-99 and in other countries it's at different developing stages,different approaches, different elements and scope, even different terminology," said Power.

"So it is not as easy to do the comparison," she said, adding that the college mustensurenurses meet basiccompetencies to protect patient safety.

Power said a nursing professor from Memorial University or another expert could verify the curriculum from a nurse practitioner program outside the countryto determinewhether it matchesCanadian standards. But Power said they aren't currently assessing any applicants.

Kane said it's not clear how much such an assessment would cost, but it could be about $650, according to emails Kane provided to CBC News.

There are about 8,000 nurse practitioners in Canada, according to Lynn Power of the College of Registered Nurses of Newfoundland Labrador. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

"We've had very few applications from nurse practitioners that were trained elsewhere," Power said, adding that fewer than twoper cent of registered nurses in the province are internationally trained.

Shesaid nurse practitioners are a small but growing field with about 8,000 licensed in Canada, compared with 400,000 registered nurses licensed in the country.

"I am excited to say that we are working on a new process with Atlantic Canada to look at developing an Atlantic Canada solution that we would have [a] template that we could look at and therefore that would standardize it," Power said.

Premier Andrew Furey said the provincial governmentis also looking to reduce red tape for health workers.

"We're certainly looking at how to get rid of the red tape in the practice of medicine, nursing and allied health professionals," he said.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador