Can anyone who has gone through the job search and lmia process as a nurse share their stories?
So it's not easy for licensed physicians and nurses?An LMIA is used for filling a job vacancy that no Canadian or PR can do. Now you decide how "easy" it is to get one..
I thought most nurses were working full time?Also To get a LMIA, the employer must provide full-time, permanent employment. Many nursing positions are on-call, part-time, and on contract.
May work full time in part time jobs at different hospitals or long-term care homes. At the hospital I work at (not a nurse) all postings for nursing positions are casual, full-time or part-time, not permanent. You need a LMIA for a permanent, full-time position plus be licensed. Look at the Atlantic provinces as believe they have a program for RNs. Assume you are a RN, not a LPN.I thought most nurses were working full time?
I thought most nurses were working full time?
Thanks for sharing your experience. It helps for somes that only believe in information given by people who had the experience. (instead of offical info on websites, news articales, numbers and reports. )my wife was a registered nurse in the UK with a good nursing degree from a good UK university and so far has not managed to get licensed in Ontario as the College of Nursing Ontario basically believe that a nursing degree from outside of Canada is inferior and therefore they are demanding that she completes additional courses (all of which were covered in her UK degree)
my wife was a registered nurse in the UK with a good nursing degree from a good UK university and so far has not managed to get licensed in Ontario as the College of Nursing Ontario basically believe that a nursing degree from outside of Canada is inferior and therefore they are demanding that she completes additional courses (all of which were covered in her UK degree)
Yeah we thought it should be easier after all there’s a huge shortage of nurses here. In fact she got a job offer within 2 weeks of arrival but without the license, she can’t take it up but the hospital are keeping the position open for the time being.Surprised. For physicians who are licensed from the UK the transition is quite easy. Normally health professionals from US, UK, Ireland, Australia, NZ and sometimes South Africa usually have an easy time. Just shows how screwed up the system is for nurses.
Yeah we thought it should be easier after all there’s a huge shortage of nurses here. In fact she got a job offer within 2 weeks of arrival but without the license, she can’t take it up but the hospital are keeping the position open for the time being.
They won’t even allow her to do NCLEX without doing these courses (at $1k each).Like physicians I’m surprised it isn’t easier because the training is similar. Can see that there may be more skill verification if it is advanced nursing like surgical nursing, ICU nursing, etc. Guess it is due to the fact that NCLEX is the standard in North America.
They won’t even allow her to do NCLEX without doing these courses (at $1k each).