PM Jacinda Ardern suggests migrant nurses put off by needing to stay in role for two years ‘perhaps don’t want to be a nurse in NZ’ – Newshub

Posted: July 13, 2022 at 8:34 am

At the time, Immigration Minister Michael Wood defended the policy saying working for two years before getting residency is still fast-tracked.

But Wood also suggested he was open to changes if the system didn't work.

When questioned on Monday by AM host Ryan Bridge whether the Government was planning to change their policy to include nurses in the fast-tracked list, Jacinda Ardern said they already have a pathway to residency

"All we're asking is that you not just be qualified but that you be willing to work as a nurse. Because of course, we won't solve our problem unless people come in and are willing to be a nurse while they're here," Ardern told Bridge.

"So we've simplified it. In the past, there was only one nursing category that had a pathway to residency or a simple one, and that was aged care, we've now opened that up across the board. And relative to other countries we have a very simple in some cases, most cases I would argue, better and easier pathway to residence."

When asked why nurses were expected to work for two years before applying for residency but doctors weren't, Ardern said nurses were more likely to gain residency and leave the sector than GPs.

"Immigration New Zealand was proposing that they work [for] two years first. What I was advised at the time was that it was a request that had come through because there had been a slightly higher rate of those who would come into New Zealand as nurses exiting the workforce, so that was the reason for that."

When asked what evidence the Prime Minister had to support the theory that nurses were more likely to switch careers, Ardern said she had already answered the question.

"I actually answered it in the first question - a slightly smaller but slightly higher rate of exit amongst those migrant nurses who were coming into others."

When questioned what percentage the increase was, Ardern said it was "relatively small, but higher".

She said the request to put nurses on the secondary list came from the District Health Boards.

Ardern also suggested if the two-year requirement was too high for some nurses, perhaps they didn't actually want to come and work as a nurse in Aotearoa.

"If the issue is that we have a nursing shortage, why would you not want someone who came into the country to come in not just with a qualification but with a commitment to be a nurse?" the Prime Minister questioned.

"If people think that the barrier is too high that suggests that perhaps they don't want to be a nurse in New Zealand, and that is really what we need them for."

The Prime Minister didn't clarify exactly how much more likely nurses were to leave the sector than doctors.

Ardern's comments come after the New Zealand Nurses Organisation warned patients will die unless staffing shortages are fixed.

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PM Jacinda Ardern suggests migrant nurses put off by needing to stay in role for two years 'perhaps don't want to be a nurse in NZ' - Newshub

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