Europe now pirating Phl. nursing students
Healthworkers

Europe now pirating Phl. nursing students

Jan 23, 2023, 8:24 AM
Rose De La Cruz

Rose De La Cruz

Writer/Columnist

UK and Germany are actively recruiting and offering ‘attractive packages’ to Filipino nursing students to address the huge demand for healthcare workers.

Thus reported Vilma Garcia, president of the employees union of De La Salle University Medical Center in Cavite as she stressed that when they are already practicing they can bring their family with them.

“That’s a big offer and we cannot equal that,” she told the Philippine Star.
“Foreign countries are giving very attractive packages to our 2nd year nursing students so that they can continue their studies in their country and they will provide everything – tuition and lodging,” she said in an interview.

Garcia said since 2022, foreign countries are directly contacting the school administration in the recruitment of nursing students.

She estimated that a fourth of their nursing students have accepted the offer. “Of course, they’re still young and they also want to experience studying abroad.”

Part of the contract, she said, is that the nursing student will have to work in the host country after graduation.

The school administration, Garcia said, is not stopping the nursing students and letting them decide if they would accept the offer from other countries.

But she expressed fear that the ongoing recruitment of Filipino nursing students will further worsen the prevailing manpower shortage in private hospitals.

At this time, Garcia said De La Salle could not operate fully and can only accommodate 43 percent of the bed capacity due to lack of nurses. With a 250-bed capacity, she said De La Salle is the biggest private hospital in Cavite.

A 250-bed capacity hospital would require 340 nurses to fully operate. However, she said De La Salle only has 100 nurses working at this time.

Garcia noted that many of the nurses have opted to resign because of low salaries and being overworked. Private hospitals could only afford an entry-level salary ranging from P12,500 to P16,000 a month.

Even the employees’ union, she said, has been helping in the recruitment of new nurses to address the shortage.

“We are already looking to the provinces for new graduates, but we can’t keep up with the competition especially from foreign countries,” Garcia explained.

She said the manpower shortage in De La Salle is not unusual, but a common situation happening in most private hospitals nationwide.

Garcia called on the government to immediately address the problem besetting the country’s health care system.

Health Undersecretary Dr. Maria Rosario S. Vergeire confirmed that the out migration of healthcare professionals because of these attractive offers.

For this, the Department of Health (DOH) is bent on incentivizing Filipino nurses to prevent them from leaving the country following reports that some European countries are actively recruiting Filipino nursing students by offering them attractive compensation packages.

“Their offer is bigger because we all know, across the globe, different countries are experiencing gaps in the number of health-care workers (HCWs) . . . maybe because of resignation, because of the pandemic. And maybe because of out-migration [also],” Vergeire explained adding that this situation has been going on and the government can’t stop them from seeking greener pastures.

Firstly, she said, that is their right to find better paying jobs. She pitched to Congress to standardize the salary of private and public HCWs so there will be no distinction as it becomes competitive across the different cadres of HCWs.

House Bill No. 4599, or the Salary Increase for Nurses Act, seeks to set a minimum monthly salary of P50,000 for nurses in government and private hospitals. The bill was filed by House Deputy Minority Leader France Castro of the ACT party list.


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