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Organize
to survive, health expert advises Pinoy nurses in
UK
by
MARLENE H. ELMENZO
MAKATI CITY--HAVING a collective voice may save
the jobs of Filipino nurses threatened to be sucked
into the fiscal hole of the United Kingdom’s
public health system, a health management expert
recommends.
Filipino nurses who wish to stay longer in UK should
make the NHS (National Health Service Trusts in
the UK) realize their impact on that country’s
health sector, Dr. Eufemia Yap of the Ateneo Graduate
School of Business told the OFW Journalism Consortium.
“They should address this with a collective
voice,” the school’s health unit director
said. “They need to tell the NHS: ‘Hey,
we are important players here.’”
Yap was responding to questions on what Filipinos
could do a month after UK Health Minister Lord Warner
of Brockley in July announced the removal of nursing
from the “national shortage occupation list”.
With this new policy, job openings for nurses will
first be advertised to British nationals and Europeans.
Foreigners would only be considered for recruitment
if there would be no qualified candidates from the
European workforce.
The same rule applies for foreigners currently employed
under work permits: they would be given the last
priority for hiring.
“Taking nursing off the shortage list does
not stop employers undertaking international recruitment,
it only means that they have to demonstrate that
they cannot fill a post with a UK or EEA [European
Economic Area] applicant first,” a July 3,
2006 statement from the health department said.
“If employers are unable to fill a particular
nursing post following advertisement, they may then
apply to the Home Office for a work permit,”
it added.
Currently the largest health care services system
in Europe, the NHS is subdivided into smaller organizations
called Trusts. Apart from overseeing hospital operations
in every county or province in the UK, an NHS Trust
also manages recruitment of doctors, nurses, health
workers and non-medical staff.
In this system works some 40,000 Filipino nurses,
half of who have no residence visa and would have
to leave the UK upon expiration of their work permits,
as the new policy mandates.
According to the policy, posts held by these foreign
workers would be offered first to locals.
No
return
ACCORDING to Yap, in this situation, it is best
for nurses to rely upon themselves because the Philippine
government, which remains divided on the issue of
health worker migration, could only do so much.
On the one hand, she said, is the Department of
Health, which makes do with the limited healthcare
workforce in the country. On the other is the Department
of Labor and Employment, which continuously manages
the export of the country’s best and brightest.
Filipino nurses, Yap said, also need to solve their
problem by making themselves more competitive.
“They should challenge themselves and reshape
themselves as nursing professionals,” she
said. “They can do this by continuing their
professional education and taking in leadership
roles.”
Ateneo, to note, has the only business school that
offers hospital management degree courses to health
sector professionals.
“Packaging themselves well” will also
help nurses to demand for better opportunities should
they decide to settle in the Philippines, Yap said.
Nurses who really don’t want to return to
the country, however, must start seeking other opportunities
in the Middle East or in the US, and consider possible
“trade-offs”, she added.
“They may be employed in other countries [even
though] the work condition is not as good as that
in UK’s.”
Nurses like Riza Franco who works in Queen Alexandra
Hospital, Portsmouth, Scotland, are bracing for
an extreme scenario: the narrowing of the market
for foreign health workers.
“There’re a lot of opportunities,”
she said. “Australia alone is offering immigrant
visa. It offers better compensation packages.”
Still, Franco, 31, says she’s not that worried
since she has an “indefinite leave to remain”
(permanent residence) visa.
Except for the right to vote, the visa entitles
Franco to the rights enjoyed by the British.
“I am already a resident here so I am not
under a contract anymore. I can work anywhere and
as long as I want to.”
Trusts
FRANCO’S resilience is understandable since
her family in the Philippines relies on the financial
support she extends.
Franco sends money to get her two younger sisters
through college, said Mary, one of her sisters.
Sometimes she also sends money to her elder brother
whose daughter suffers from a rare disease in the
nervous system.
Above all, she sends money for the three-year-old
daughter she left behind.
Mary said the Franco family would be deeply affected
if Riza loses her job.
But she said she’s confident her sister can
survive any trial that comes her way.
“Maabilidad si Ate [My sister’s resourceful],”
Mary said. “She’s always on her toes.”
Franco, who was interviewed via the Internet, said
she’s always keeping her ears on the ground.
She said she has heard from fellow Filipinos news
of cost-cutting measures like forced retirement
and closure of smaller hospitals or hospital units
or departments.
Geraldine Marquez, 36, a Filipino nurse working
at the Bucknall Hospital, in Stoke-on-Trent, shared
one news.
Marquez cited that Bucknall has stopped hiring relievers
and extra staff to ease workload and closed down
one of its four wards. Bucknall is under the North
Staffordshire Combined Health Care NHS Trust.
Franco alleged that around 250 jobs have been lost
last August in the Portsmouth Trust where Queen
Alexandra belongs.
However, Franco and Marquez said they haven’t
heard that Filipinos were included in these job
reductions or affected by the hiring freeze.
The OFW Journalism Consortium tried almost every
week of August to verify these information with
Paul Cortes of the Department of Foreign Affairs.
However, the office of Cortes said the British Desk
director remained “unavailable for comments”.
A press release last July said the Philippine labor
office in London “has not yet received any
report from a Filipino nurse losing his or her job”.
Still, the DFA admitted “that some NHS Hospitals
are experiencing budgetary problems” and “a
few hospitals have announced they will undertake
cost-cutting measures and redundancy”.
The press release was issued in July.
However, both Franco and Marquez told the OFW Journalism
Consortium that the recruitment freeze in their
respective hospitals has been implemented since
August.
Worries
MARQUEZ said her fellow Filipinos who don’t
have residence visas have started worrying.
“We all want to be secured when it comes to
our job, lalo na’t nasa ibang bansa tayo [especially
since we’re in another country].”
Marquez has been working under a “Leave to
Remain” visa for two years.
She said her marriage to her British husband a month
before the new policy was announced became providential
in a sense: her visa expires two years from now.
At the moment, Marquez said she’s staying
put. She has no plan of either coming back to the
Philippines or transferring to another country since
she will soon give birth to her first child.
Marquez said she expects the employment freeze will
last long.
“Matatagalan pa bago mag-hire ulit [It would
take long before hospitals resume hiring foreign
nurses],” she surmises.
The Philippines has been one of the major sources
of foreign nurses in the UK when the British government
expanded the workforce in the health sector nine
years ago.
“I’ll cross the bridge when I get there,”
Marquez said if the worse scenario of losing her
job becomes real.
On the other hand, Franco, who spent the past four
years working in the UK, believes the hiring freeze
is temporary.
Replacing foreign worker with homegrown talent to
fill up workforce and save costs would not do well
for the nurses and the health sector, she said.
“Whether they [British government officials]
like it or not, kailangan nila ng mga [they would
need foreign] nurses.”
However, Lord Warner was quoted in the health department
statement as saying that the NHS is now moving to
“a closer match between demand and supply”.
“We now have more than 379,000 qualified nurses
working in the NHS, 82,000 more than in 1997 as
well as record levels of nurses in training,”
he said.
Lord Warner hinted that large-scale international
nurse recruitment across the NHS would soon be over
since this “was only ever intended to be a
short-term measure”. “The aim of the
NHS has always been to look towards home-grown staff
in the first instance and have a diverse workforce
that reflects local communities.”
Three years ago, however, a study by the Royal College
of Nursing titled “Here to Stay” noted
that with an increasing number of foreign nurses
in the UK, “overseas recruitment of nurses
is no longer viewed as a stop-gap measure by the
NHS”.
The attraction of the UK for Filipino nurses is
the minimum monthly salary of £1,017 (P95,587.83
at P93.99=£1), according to a document “Host
Country Legislated Minimum Wages” by the Philippine
Overseas Employment Administration. end
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