Hello Sarass,
With most agency, if you secure a job it is casual. With a casual job, I highly doubt if you will be able to get an LMO. But you may want to ask other people with knowledge in terms of casual job. A few agency will guarantee you full time hours. With this, it may be possible to get a LMO.
I know there are some recruitment agency that sponsors IEN to work in Canada. For example, I think there was one that recruited around 100 IEN a few years ago to work in manitoba and alberta. But I have no idea the name or contact information or anything else of this agencies.
Hello Canyeah
No, I am not saying home care providers are easy to get. I am saying that part time and casual jobs are easier to get than full time jobs. You can easily work in the hospital, but it may be difficult to get a full time job working 40 hours a week (although you may be lucky to get it), especially if you are NOT picky about location. It is easy to get a job working in a hospital through an agency. This means, you are hired by the agency (not the hospital) and you work at the hospital. Your work location will not be constant, they may send you to one hospital today and another hospital tommorrow or another unit tommorrow. Also, there is usually no guaranteed hours, although it is often not a problem for nurses to get a 40 hour work. For example, my sister who graduated in Canada as a nurse in June, is still looking for a full time job. Meanwhile, she is working in homecare, doing home visit for sick patients discharged from the hospital. Her friend who graduated as a RN in July is also still looking for full time job. She works doing home visit and also through an agency, working in a hospital. When I graduated in 2004 from a university in Canada, I was lucky. I finished my courses in April, did my graduation in June, wrote my exam in June, got a job as a nursing student at summer camp in July (getting a job at a summer camp is quite easy but low pay, you are without your family and only over the summer), and in early August I became a Registered nurse and started working in September full time at a teaching hospital. Also, while working, I was working full time at a teaching hospital, worked for an agency (NHI) casual.
The notice you get when you work through an agency is not much. Sometimes they can call you 1-4 hours ahead of time and cancel your shift. And they may call you for a shift and tell you to try to get there within an hour. You have an option of accepting and declining shifts (this is the luxury). When I use to work once in a while for agency, they sometimes give me 1 week advance notice and other times only like 4-6 hours notice. Getting enough hours working through an agency is not a problem as many people will work with many agency at the same time, the problem is the lack of stability, and benefits. Some people actually prefer to work with an agency than work in a hospital because of the higher pay and the flexibility (you can decide to not work anytime you like). If you are a RN and you get a 3 month certificate in intensive care, agencies will pay like 50-60 per hour while working directly for the hospital will pay 29-40 per hour.
Yes, if you mind the travel, it may be a problem working with home care agency. But normally, if you work as a homecare nurse, you get paid for the time you spend traveling. You almost always need a car and a drivers licence for home care or home visit jobs. When I worked full time doing home visit for Toronto Public Health it was around 50 cents per kilometer when you travel. Also, because of the time you spend traveling you are paid more. Yes, safety may be a problem. However, Canada is one of the safest countries to live in. I didnt find this a major concern when I did home visit but it depends on the area you work
I dont suggest you use Kaplan, unless to understand pathophysio stuffs, if you do dont focus on it. Kaplan is america and the american and canadian exam are extremely different. American exam is focused on physical stuffs, Canadian exam is more psychosocial/ethical/legal. I must still say there are clinical stuffs to in the canadian exam on maternity, med surg, psy, public health and pediatrics. I recommend the Canadian Registered Nurse Exame Preparation Guide available here http://www.cna-nurses.ca/CNA/nursing/rnexam/preptools/default_e.aspx This is made by the same people that set the RN exam. Make sure you not only read it but also know the rationale why it is not a specific answer and why every single answer is wrong. If you miss any question, read up on it. The other thing I advice is to look at the entry to practice guideline. See here http://www.cno.org/Global/docs/reg/41037_EntryToPracitic_final.pdf Although you may not get direct questions from this, but the questions are set to test your knowledge in this area as well as the physical stuffs.
Congraulations on your approval Canyeah, which country are you from.
If you have more questions for me, please post here and also mail me to remind me to check the board if I dont reply. Or is there a way to set the website so that when I reeive a reply to a post, you get notified by email
Hope this helps