Requirements for an IEN to Work in the U.S.
As international nurses and doctors are arriving in the country in record numbers, they must complete educational requirements for competency and follow evidence-based guidelines and practice standards here in the U.S. They bring bilingual abilities, valuable world views, and experience. Nurses need to be aware of legislation that may affect nursing practice for their state. Speak with your legislators to make your valuable nursing voice and opinions heard.
Once arriving to the U.S., internationally educated nurses have found challenges because their training was different or lower than what was needed in this country. In addition to the social and political differences, they found difficulty with acculturation into the American nursing culture. Racism continues to exist, even among nurses. The American Nurses Association is currently engaged in a national campaign to address racism in nursing and how it impacts nurses, patients, and our communities.
Realities of Nursing Shortages
“The nursing shortage is real,” declared then-Tenet Healthcare Executive Chairman Ron Rittenmeyer in 2022, and it continues to persist. Efforts to address the challenges have included mental health counseling and awareness campaigns by hospital administration. Those have been helpful, but not enough to stop the outflow of bedside nurses.
An additional solution to the nursing shortage is recruiting international nurses to fill the gaps. In the past, a message to IENs was, “Your RN license is your visa.” Recruitment and the quality of training for these nurses varies by state boards of nursing. They all must still meet the state board requirements for licensure and successfully complete the NCLEX. Many IENs come to the US and take a refresher course in preparation for the NCLEX.
What do Nurses Need to Know?
Once the IEN, or physician, arrives and is trained in your unit or work setting, remember they are needed, and nurses need to be welcoming. We need more qualified and competent registered nurses.
Invite the IEN to join you for breaks and make sure they have received a good orientation to the unit. Although they have worked as RNs before, Western medicine may be practiced differently in their home country. Do not assume they understand everything. Remember the time it took you to adjust and orient as a new nurse? Be generous with your kindness and assistance as the IEN gets up to speed.
Managers need to remind them that English is the primary spoken language spoken on the unit. Be curious about their home country instead of cautious. Welcome the much-needed diversity in nursing. It will make our profession stronger as we adopt ideas and insights from other cultures.
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