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Making internationally trained nurses work as PSWs is 'exploitative,' RNAO tells province

The Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario is blasting a move by the province to invite internationally educated nurses to do the work of personal support workers while not giving them credit for the practical work experience required by the College of Nurses.

College of Nurses process to certify internationally trained nurses too lengthy, RNAO says

Nurses attend to a COVID-19 patient in the Humber River Hospital intensive care unit on Jan. 13, 2022. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

The association that represents registered nurses in Ontariois blasting a move by the provinceto invite internationally trained nursesto do the work of personal support workers while not giving themcredit for the practical work experience required by the College of Nurses of Ontario.

The memo sent out by the Ministries of Long-term care and Health on Jan.17 tolong-term carelicenseessays the move is in response to staff shortages due to COVID-19-related absences or isolation requirements. It states that select internationally trained nurses (IENs) who are applicants to the collegewill be eligible to work in long-term care facilitiesbut as personalsupport workers (PSWs) or unregulated care providers.

In its program guide, the ministryalso states that the work won't count towardsIENs'college requirements to show evidence of practice.

"We find this exploitative," said Doris Grinspun, CEO of the Registered Nurses' Associationof Ontario (RNAO).

According to Grinspun, the ministry is telling IENSto "work for a much lower rate" than they'dmake as aregistered nurse(RN) or a registered practical nurse (RPN)in along-term care home.

Doris Grinspun, CEO of the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario, says more needs to be done to facilitate the registration of IENs to allow them to work in this province. (Sara Frizzell/CBC)

"'But no, we will not count any of the work you are doing for any of the requirements of the college,'" she said.

The memo comes as nurses battle burnout on the front lines of the pandemicwith both increased workloads and staff absences due to COVID-19 infections and isolation. While some IENs have recently been dispatched to work in hospitals,the RNAOsays there are thousands of others who are ready and able to work. The association isonce againurging the Ontario College of Nurses to move faster to register IENs to allow them to work in the province.

'It's kind of degrading'

Charmaine Lazo is an internationally educated nurse from the Philippines who has also worked in Saudi Arabia. She's been here since 2019, has already completed her Ontario education and is a licensed RN and RPN, but is waiting for her permanent residency.

"To be honest, it's kind of degrading," said Lazo, referring to herinternationally educated peers being asked to work as PSWs. But she says many understand the difficulties staff are facing in long-term care homes.

"We're ready. We're here, we're ready to help," she told CBC News.

"At least give us something that we can look forward to," said Lazo. Sheadded it's "sad" that the work won't be counted toward their practical experience required for their licensing.

Birgit Umaigba is an ICU/ER nurse who is also a clinical practice instructor. (CBC)

What makes it worse, says nursing clinical instructor Birgit Umaigba, is that the province is grappling with a shortage of nurses.

"These nurses are skilled, knowledgeable experts in their specialities," said Umaigba.

"We need them working as nurses."

The RNAO says the process IENsmust complete to be able to work as nurses in Ontario is too lengthyand the College of Nurses needs tostreamline it.

Grinspunsaysshe wonders why the college's process takes so long when many internationally trained nurses have more extensive credentials from their own countries. Shesaid she's seen some IENs wait eight to 10 years to be able to work as nurses in Ontario.

College and ministry response

In a statement to CBC News, the College of Nurses of Ontario saysthe IENs entering the staffing pool in long-term care homes haven't completed their registration requirements, which is why they are working as unregulated care providers

"Because they are not working under nursing supervision, this experience isn't able to count toward their registration requirements," the statement reads.

A nurse walks down the hall in the Humber River Hospital intensive care unit on Jan. 13, 2022. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

The college saysit announced changes to its language proficiency policy early this month to "create efficiencies" for internationally educated applications and saidit's working with partners to identify solutions and improve the efficiency ofits registration processin 2022.

The Ministry of Health told CBC News it recently launched a program that allows IENs to work as nurses in hospitals, and in that program the work does count towardtheir College of Nursing registration requirements.

The ministry says IENs being added to the long-term-care staffing pool haven't completed as many of the college requirements as those in the other program,andthe LTC program wasn't supposed to support the college requirement of having recent practice experience.

The ministry says, however, the work would: "provide these IENs with valuable experience in the health-care system, particularly in the long-term care sector."

With files from Kirthana Sasitharan