They also argue for the need for “minimal pan-Canadian health workforce data” and funding for strategies “to address workload and improve work-life balance for our health care workers.”
Christine Kouri, Health and Diversity Equity Manager at CHEO, confirms that there “should be a pan-Canadian solution as health is currently a provincial responsibility. And even within the country, it is very difficult for newcomers to find work in this field.
In many cases, Christine Kouri reminds that the newcomers Multiply applications across multiple states for the best chance of being accepted. However, the challenge remains of claiming their diploma earned abroad when states do not have the same requirements for assessing diplomas.
Even more difficult for French-speaking immigrants
For Roukya Abdi-Aden, National Advisory Manager in the Income and Tourism Sector at the Economic Development and Employability Network (RDEE Canada), “we need to ensure that this announcement has implications for the recognition of prior learning”.
“We get competent people, but they don’t work. And for French speakers, there’s the language barrier, which makes it even more difficult to find a job,” she says.
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