Perceived and actual difficulties encountered by class 2007 students of X college of nursing basis for a proposed action plan / Arch John L. Alueta [and fifteen others].

By: Alueta, Arch John LContributor(s): Agustinez, Rhea Ann P | Arpon, Yvonne Niña E | Audiencia, Joy Lorraine | Bagano, Cristina T | Binueza, Gwen A | Cabatingan, Honey Mae Y | Cadelina, Jeanne Rapel M | Caresusa, Hera | Catubig, Rosemarie A | Chua, Chayna T | Crisostomo, Wesley B | Dosado, Quennie Rose M | Echavez, Rey Manuel F | Entrada, Grace | Fernandez, Ian Peterfranc CMaterial type: TextTextPublisher: Cebu City : University of Cebu, 2006Description: iv, 83 leavesContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeSummary: Summary: The most popular college degree in the Philippines today and over the past few years is nursing. More and more Filipino nurses are leaving the country and many more are lining up to try better opportunities abroad. According to the Department of Health,85 percent of the country's total number of licensed nurses is found in the hospitals of other countries (www.doh.gov.ph). Why is the Philippines a top supplier of nurses in the world? It is because the country produces skilled nursing graduates who can speak good English. Nursing export boom has also resulted in a boom in nursing education. Many substandard schools have been set up, and many of theses play on the dreams of those who aspire for a job abroad (www.globalvoiceonline.org). In his Philstar column, Max Soliven argues that hundreds of hospitals have closed due to this (export of resources outside the country). It has become a national tragedy (Soliven, 2006). Nursing education in fact has been retrofitted to meet the demands of the global market. Courses like transcutural studies are included in the curriculum and new, shortened designer courses are being offered for doctors and other professionals who want to take up nursing. Population demographies are reshaping the healthcare work force with respect to race, ethnicity, gender, national origin, sexual orientation, age handicap, disability, and related factors as national sensitivity to various forms of diversity grows. In these new curricula, the compassionate and care-giving values that are supposed to be inculcated among healthcare professionals are being overlooked; instead nursing is treated as primarily a passport to the good life.
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Item type Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode
Thesis Thesis
Periodicals
T Al81pe 2006 (Browse shelf) Not for loan
Thesis Thesis
Periodicals
T Al81pe 2006 (Browse shelf) Not for loan

Thesis (Degree Bachelor of Science in Nursing) -- University of Cebu-Banilad, 2006.

Summary: The most popular college degree in the Philippines today and over the past few years is nursing. More and more Filipino nurses are leaving the country and many more are lining up to try better opportunities abroad. According to the Department of Health,85 percent of the country's total number of licensed nurses is found in the hospitals of other countries (www.doh.gov.ph). Why is the Philippines a top supplier of nurses in the world? It is because the country produces skilled nursing graduates who can speak good English. Nursing export boom has also resulted in a boom in nursing education. Many substandard schools have been set up, and many of theses play on the dreams of those who aspire for a job abroad (www.globalvoiceonline.org). In his Philstar column, Max Soliven argues that hundreds of hospitals have closed due to this (export of resources outside the country). It has become a national tragedy (Soliven, 2006). Nursing education in fact has been retrofitted to meet the demands of the global market. Courses like transcutural studies are included in the curriculum and new, shortened designer courses are being offered for doctors and other professionals who want to take up nursing. Population demographies are reshaping the healthcare work force with respect to race, ethnicity, gender, national origin, sexual orientation, age handicap, disability, and related factors as national sensitivity to various forms of diversity grows. In these new curricula, the compassionate and care-giving values that are supposed to be inculcated among healthcare professionals are being overlooked; instead nursing is treated as primarily a passport to the good life.

Nursing

Nursing

English

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