UK turns to Asia for nurses to cover staff shortages
Hospitals recruit health workers from India and Philippines amid fall from EU
RHYANNON BARTLETT-IMADEGAWA, Nikkei staff writer
Nurses take their oaths in Manila. The high caliber of the nurses and training programs in the Philippines and the experience of recruiting in the country has made it one of the nursing strongholds in Asia. © Reuter
LONDON -- Zaira Paz, a nurse from the Philippines, arrived in the U.K. more than a year ago to work and help support her family back home.
She had first applied to work in Singapore, but later set her sights on Britain when it opened up to applicants, as examination costs would be covered by the hospital there. Paz also felt an English-language environment was important to be able to communicate with patients.
"How can you offer the care that you want if you've got this language barrier," the 30-year-old said. The hospital where she works now welcomes three to four new nurses every month from her home country.
A combination of factors including uncertainty over Brexit affecting European nurses, demographic changes and a shortage in domestically trained staff have made nurses from outside of Europe an important part of the workforce in the U.K., which is estimated to have over 30,000 vacancies for registered nurses in England alone. The Philippines and India now account for the largest number of foreign nurses working in England.
"If we were not being able to be supported by the nurses from India and the Philippines, if we were just focusing within the U.K. or currently within Europe to recruit the numbers of nurses that are needed, we would struggle," said Andrew Carter, associate chief nurse of the Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
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