Ontario nursing college proposes to temporarily register international nurses

Ontario’s nursing college is proposing to register internationally educated nurses on a temporary basis, a move that could allow nearly 6,000 applicants to practice in the province’s hospitals amid a nurse staffing shortage that has led to temporary emergency room closures.

Health Minister Sylvia Jones recently directed the College of Nurses of Ontario to develop plans to more quickly register internationally educated professionals within two weeks.

The college provided its response to the ministry Thursday, and said there are 5,970 active international applicants currently living in Ontario.

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It says the college could make a regulation change — if the minister supports it — that would allow internationally trained nurses to be temporarily registered while they go through the process of full registration, such as completing education and an exam.

The college proposes to allow applicants who have completed nursing education approved in another jurisdiction to temporarily register, and to only revoke a temporary certificate after two failed exam attempts, instead of the one attempt they currently are allowed.

Temporarily registered nurses have to be monitored by a registered practical nurse, a registered nurse or a nurse practitioner.

“These changes to the Temporary Class will enable IEN (internationally educated nurse) applicants with education gaps to register and practice as a nurse under terms, conditions and limitations for public protection while they complete remaining requirements (i.e., education, exam) to register in the General Class,” the college wrote to the minister.

“It also ensures that IEN applicants can maintain registration requirements they already met, such as evidence of recent nursing practice.”

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The college also proposes to make it easier for about 5,300 non-practising nurses living in Ontario to return to the workforce, if they want to. Current rules say a nurse must have practised within the last three years to be reinstated, but the college says that regulation could be changed.

Jones announced a plan Thursday to reduce surgical waiting lists, free up more hospital beds and add more health professionals such as nurses in order to stabilize the health system. One measure includes temporarily covering the exam, application and registration fees for internationally trained nurses.

In addition to proposing new steps the college itself could take to register more internationally educated nurses, it is also calling on the government to do more to provide those nurses with necessary education.

“Since early 2022, CNO has been raising awareness among system partners, including the Ministry of Health, that the unavailability of appropriate education for IEN applicants is a key barrier to their timely registration,” the college’s council president wrote to the minister, along with the acting executive director and CEO.

“This remains the case today. Ministry collaboration and leadership are needed to mobilize key stakeholders to coordinate next steps towards establishing education options for IENs.”