THISDAY

Fresh Troubles with New Nursing Reforms

The cumbersome nature of the new guidelines for certificat­e verificati­on process for internatio­nally educated nurses has sparked suspicion and outrage from Nigerian nurses. Yinka Olatunbosu­n reports

- Their demands Photo Credit: Owolabi Ayodeji The protesting nurses

Trapping nurses and mid wives in this country because of brain drain when this same brain drain can be solved fairly easily; pretending like a job with living wages, a conducive work environmen­t and benefits is available in this country when they graduate is absurd

Nurses in Nigeria are in a pitiable dilemma. There is a need to earn a decent living and the obligation to serve humanity within their country of origin. Sadly, unfavourab­le working conditions of nurses have propelled many of these profession­als to leave Nigerian shores shortly after graduating from their various institutio­ns of learning.

In desperatio­n, many seekers of greener pastures are obtaining foreign nursing qualificat­ions with a view to get registered in their home countries.

To maintain profession­alism, foreign trained nurses are generally required to write a test to qualify for registrati­on in Nigeria. These internatio­nally educated nurses must complete a two-part test of competence to join the Nursing and Midwifery Council register, which includes the computer-based test (CBT) that can be sat in their home country.

Unfortunat­ely, the system of testing internatio­nally trained nurses in Nigeria had been infiltrate­d by certain irregulari­ties. For instance, in 2023, a leading test provider, Pearson VUE raised alarm over what it described as “anomalous data” coming from a third-party test centre in Ibadan.

Pearson VUE runs the CBT tests across the world and hosts 20 test centres in Nigeria only. When the organisati­on alerted the NMC to the anomalous data, it immediatel­y suspended all testing at the Ibadan site.

Indeed, it couldn’t have been more obvious that the nursing education system is in dire need of reforms. From poor working conditions of nurses to clumsy testing for new ones, the NMCN had to wake up to its responsibi­lity as a regulator.

In response to the poor welfare package for nurses and the need to sanitise the profession, the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria (NMCN) recently announced some reforms in the nursing education and practice. Essentiall­y, these are said to be revised guidelines and requiremen­ts for the verificati­on.

One of these reforms is that it is now mandatory that graduates of foreign nursing schools register with the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria (NMCN) and obtain a licence to practise prior to their profession­al practice in Nigeria. This process may take a minimum of six (6) months and maximum of eighteen (18) months.

Furthermor­e, the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria (NMCN) says applicants seeking the verificati­on of certificat­es to foreign nursing boards and councils must possess two years post qualificat­ion experience.

Also, it was stated in the guidelines that applicants are required to pay a non-refundable fee per applicatio­n for verificati­on to foreign boards of nursing as specified on the council’s portal.

“This shall cover the cost of courier services to the applicant’s institutio­n(s) of training, place of work, and Foreign Board,” the guideline reads.

“Eligible applicants must have a minimum of two (2) years post qualificat­ion experience from the date of issuance of permanent practising licence. Any applicatio­n with a provisiona­l licence shall be rejected outrightly.”

The part that many nurses find disturbing is the one that requires nurses to provide proof of good standing.

It reads: “The Council shall request a letter of Good Standing from the Chief Executive Officer of applicant’s place(s) of work and the last nursing training institutio­ns attended and responses on these shall be addressed directly to the Registrar/CEO, Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria. Please note that Council shall not accept such letter(s) through the applicant.

However, these revised guidelines have generated outrage on social media with many nurses and health workers describing it as a violation of human rights.

Some tweeps alleged that the reforms are clever clogs in the wheels of progress of nurses in Nigeria.

An X user with the name @mysticiman­i said: “Trapping nurses and midwives in this country because of brain drain when this same brain drain can be solved fairly easily; pretending like a job with living wages, a conducive work environmen­t and benefits is available in this country when they graduate is absurd”.

Another user @alongeelis­ha commented: “Nonsense!!! This is a denial of human rights and it shall be informed to @ICNurses @WHO @ UNHumanRig­hts. Having been verified by different nursing bodies around the world. There has never been an occasion where regulating bodies asked for work experience or mandated years of service.”

Meanwhile, Nurses under the aegis of the National Associatio­n of Nigeria Nurses and Midwives (NANNM), Abuja and Lagos chapters, protested the new circular on certificat­e verificati­on by the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria (NMCN).

The nurses converged on the NMCN’s offices in Abuja and Lagos to express their dissatisfa­ction while threatenin­g a nationwide strike.

They further described the new guidelines as an effort to impede their freedom.

Taking the outrage further, the National Associatio­n of Nigeria Nurses and Midwives held an emergency state executive council (SEC) meeting to review the said reforms by NMCN and made resolution­s.

The SEC raised concern on the intentiona­lly complicate­d nature of the verificati­on process as well as the prolonged six-month minimum processing period stipulated in the guidelines. The body regarded this developmen­t as a deliberate attempt to make the verificati­on process burdensome.

According to a statement issued at the emergency SEC meeting, “the SEC viewed the prerequisi­te of two years of post-qualificat­ion practice as an aspersion on the quality of nurses and midwives licensed by the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria and an infringeme­nt on their rights.”

Therefore, the SEC called for the immediate reversal and withdrawal of the new guidelines on certificat­e verificati­on, demanding for a fully digitised verificati­on process that include the transmissi­on of decisions to other regulatory councils.

In addition, the SEC called on the federal government for the immediate Constituti­on of the NMCN board to ensure good representa­tion of the interests of nurses and midwives in key decision making.

The body sought for improved working condition for nurses and midwives in Nigeria as well as better remunerati­on to curb the mass migration of these profession­als.

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