A House leader on Monday said that Filipinos remain the most active job-seekers in the US.
House Assistant Majority Leader and Nacionalista Party Rep. Gerald Anthony Gullas Jr. of Cebu said a total of 1,951 Philippine-educated nurses took the US National Council Licensure Examination (NCLEX) for the first time from January to June this year.
Aside from the Filipino hopefuls seeking to land on nursing jobs in the US, he said there were 420 Indians, 300 Canadians, 266 Puerto Ricans and 234 South Koreans who took the NCLEX for the first time in the first semester of 2014.
Gullas said the number of Filipino nurses taking the NCLEX for the first time is widely considered a reliable indicator as to how many of them are trying to enter the profession in America.
“The number is little changed when compared to the 1,944 Filipino nurses who took the NCLEX for the first time, excluding repeaters, over the same six-month period in 2013,” said Gullas, vice chairman of the House committee on higher and technical education.
Last year a total of 4,034 Filipinos took the NCLEX for the first time, representing less than one-fifth of the record-high 21,499 that took the same examination at the height of the 2007 nursing boom.
The NCLEX refers to the National Council Licensure Examination administered by the US National Council of State Boards of Nursing Inc.
“We do not expect the number of Filipino nurses seeking to practice their profession in America to increase any time soon. The health-care labor market there remains somewhat bleak,” Gullas said.
He also urged Filipino nurses to instead seek potential employment in the Middle East and other countries that continue to recruit foreign health-care staff.
“[But] we remain positive that the situation will eventually improve as the US economy starts to recover. But right now, a number of US hospitals and nursing homes are still laying off workers,” he said.
“In fact, based on the latest report from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, in July alone US hospitals shed off 7,000 jobs, while nursing-care facilities there got rid of another 6,000,” Gullas added.
The 2007 and 2008 global financial crisis sent the US economy into deep economic slowdown that forced many hospitals and nursing homes, especially those wholly or partly funded by federal and state agencies, to cut back staff and cease hiring new nurses.
The lawmaker said that Philippines continues to produce thousands of new nurses every year despite a large surplus.