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DOLE prepares for nursing exam retake


After giving up on appealing its case, the labor department has started talks with deans of Centers of Excellence to conduct reviews for passers of the leakage-tainted June 2006 nursing licensure exams who are willing to re-take the equivalent of the controversial test modules. Labor Scretary Arturo Brion said Monday he has been coordinating with Commission on Filipinos Overseas (CFO) chairman Dante Ang in convincing the institutions to agree to the conduct of the reviews and provide an opportunity to the June 2006 nursing exam passers to be eligible for the VisaScreen Certificate, especially those wanting to work in the United States. “We are preparing all the implementing details for the time the President approves the re-take that we have arranged with the CGFNS," Brion said in an interview on ANC television. “Right now I am speaking to the deans of several nursing schools, the schools that have been characterized by the ChED (Commission on Higher Education) as Centers of Excellence as well as schools that had very high passing rates in the past nursing exams. We are discussing with them the system of review and the costing this review would entail," the labor chief explained. The Philadelphia-based Commission on Graduates of Foreign Nursing Schools (CGFNS) - International announced on February 14 that Filipino nursing graduates who passed the June 2006 nursing licensure examination are not eligible for a VisaScreen Certificate. In its website (www.cgfns.org), CGFNS urged Philippine authorities to “provide an opportunity for re-take of tests (3 and 5) without surrender of licensure" so that the June 2006 passers may qualify for the VisaScreen Certificate. “The VisaScreen Certification Program is a federally mandated immigration screening program for certain foreign health professionals seeking an occupational visa to the United States. CGFNS is designated by U.S. immigration law to administer this program," it explained. “Pursuant to its mandate under Section 212(a)(5)(C) of the U.S. Immigration Nationality Act, CGFNS has determined that those Philippine nurses who were sworn in as licensed nurses in the Philippines following their passing the compromised June 2006 licensure examination are not eligible for the issuance of a VisaScreen Certificate," CGFNS explained in a succeeding announcement in its website. “CGFNS has further determined that the June 2006 passers are able to overcome this bar and qualify for issuance of a VisaScreen certificate by taking the equivalent of Tests 3 and 5 on a future Philippine nursing exam," it explained. The re-take, Brion said, is for the purposes of passing upon the validity of the Philippine nursing licenses as granted by the Professional Regulation Commission and that this is mainly for securing the VisaScreen Certificate. CGFNS, he said, is a private organization commission by the US government to implement the VisaScreen Certificate requirement under a federal immigration law. “This means to me that this is something outside the reach of the Philippine government, and this applies only to those who would wish to enter the United States. If you look at it that way, then we should be very happy that people whom they consider to be ineligible are being given the opportunity to take the exam to qualify or to be eligible for the VisaScreen Certificate," he underscored. All 17,323 passers in the June 2006 nursing licensure exam had been sworn in as licensed nurses on the basis of a decision by the Court of Appeals in October 2006. Some 1,687 of the passers from review centers where the leakage allegedly happened re-took Tests 3 (Medical Surgical Nursing) and 5 (Psychiatric Mental Health) last December 2 and 3, along with the regular batch of new examinees. In a separate radio interview, Brion said the DOLE is not forcing all of the June 2006 exam passers to retake Tests 3 and 5. “This is a voluntary decision on the part of our licensed nurses whether to go to the US. It is a personal choice, so this has to be necessarily something voluntary. We cannot impose this on people," Brion asserted. “What we are only doing is we are providing the opportunity for these graduates to be eligible for that VisaScreen Certificate. We are just enhancing their employability," he stressed. Presently, Brion said the government is just preparing arrangements for the conduct of a review for those willing to re-take the exam. Pinili namin sa aming unang pakikipag-usap ang Centers of Excellence. Ang deans nagkaroon ng mungkahi (We chose to discuss this with the Centers of Excellence first. The deans have some suggestions)," Brion said in an interview on dzRH radio. He did not say which of the Centers of Excellence have agreed to conduct the reviews for the nursing examinees who took the controversial exams in June 2006. The Commission on Higher Education (CHED) has not updated its list of Centers of Excellence since February 2001. As of February 2001, the CHED listed eight centers of excellence (www.ched.gov.ph/statistics/coecods.html) for nursing, in Cagayan Valley, Western Visayas, Eastern Visayas, Central Mindanao, Region 11, Metro Manila, and Cordillera Autonomous Region. These include the Saint Paul College in Cagayan Valley and in Iloilo; Siliman University; Liceo de Cagayan in Central Mindanao; San Pedro College in Region 11; University of Santo Tomas, University of the Philippines Manila in Metro Manila; and St. Louis University in Cordillera. Brion also reiterated that the retake of the exams will be purely voluntary, and that the retaking does not void the licenses given to the successful June 2006 examinees. Earlier, Brion said his department will offer the voluntary retake of Test 3 and 5 of the June 2006 Nursing Exam. He said the DOLE will exercise its supervision and control over the professional Regulation Commission (PRC) and is coordinating with the Board of Nursing (BON) on this. Brion said he is waiting for Malacañang to sign an executive order he drafted so the DOLE can handle the retake of the exam. "Inaasahan kong lalagdaan at aaprubahan ang EO, para matutuloy itong review classes na ibibigay ng iilang iskwelahan (I expect President Arroyo to sign it and approve the EO so we can push through with the review classes in selected schools)," he said. Based on the draft EO, the DOLE, acting through the BON, and using the administrative processes of the PRC, shall handle the exam re-take. The BON shall prepare the regular examination questions which shall contain the equivalent of Tests 3 and 5 of the June 2006 examination. It will also administer the exam under PRC supervision of the regular nursing examinees and under joint DOLE-PRC supervision for the voluntary examinees. Brion added that he shall designate schools as special review centers through which the government may channel financial assistance for the voluntary examinees' review. "These schools are either recognized by the Commission on Higher Education as centers of excellence in nursing or with the highest passing rate in nursing examinations in their area to ensure the integrity of the preparatory stage of the examination process," he said. On the other hand, Brion recommended the waiver of the application fee of P600 as financial assistance to those who will re-take the Tests III and V of the exams. Last December 2 and 3, the government conducted only a "selective" re-take of the compromised nursing licensure exam for 1,687 passers in the June 2006 exam who came from review centers where leakage of test manuscripts were reported. CGFNS said the decision to disqualify the June 2006 nursing licensure passers from the VisaScreen Certificate was arrived at “after careful consideration" and “made in support of this critical mission of CGFNS." It said it investigated the leakage “soon after the first reports of irregularities were received" and sent a fact-finding mission to the Philippines in September 2006. “CGFNS has concluded that the licensure process for those who received their license as a result of passing the compromised June 2006 licensure examination raises significant questions about the accurate assessment of the competencies of many of those individuals," the announcement said. “CGFNS is unable to certify that the licensure is comparable to a U.S. license. In this instance, applicable U.S. immigration law will not permit CGFNS to issue the VisaScreen Certificate required of internationally educated health care workers to those nurses who obtained Philippine licensure on the basis of passing the June 2006 nursing licensure examination," it explained. “The integrity of foreign licensing systems ultimately affects the health and safety of patients in the United States, a primary consideration of CGFNS in its role in evaluating candidates under U.S. immigration law," CGFNS said. - GMANews.TV