无码中文字幕一Av王,97亚洲综合色成在线,中文字幕无码无遮挡在线看,久久99久久国产精品

您現在的位置: Language Tips> Audio & Video> Normal Speed News  
   
 





 
Nursing program gives immigrants path out of poverty
[ 2009-05-08 10:40 ]

Download

Many American hospitals encourage patients to fill out a comment card about the service they received. Iryna Zhgya gets a lot of these comments. She keeps them in a binder at her home.

Zhgya says at a dining room table, and pulls out a comment card from one especially difficult patient, "And Aaron, he said Iryna is an excellent RN, she knows how to be firm but yet gentle."

She learned those skills back in Ukraine.

"I knew how to take care of patient. I was a nurse. I knew how to turn people every 2 hours and how to watch for the sores on their body."

Nursing in the United States, it turns out, isn't all that different from being a nurse anywhere else. The ideas are the same: You're making sure a patient's needs are met.

Politics, economics bring foreign-trained nurses to U.S.

Zhyga has been doing that most of her life. But her career as a nurse took a detour 17 years ago, when the Soviet Union collapsed and instability washed over the republics.

Nursing program gives immigrants path out of poverty

"I remember I've got so afraid of it. One of the nights I put my children on the floor. I was afraid to go to another room… And I sit on my knees, and I say, 'Dear Lord, please, take me there where you want me to be.'"

Zhyga talks a lot about her faith. She says it's what gave her and her children the courage to leave Ukraine as refugees and eventually resettle in Oregon.

Zhyga came here barely able to speak English. She had twin daughters to support, and she couldn't even drive a car. She was struggling as a single mom to make ends meet when she found out about the WIIN program. That stands for Workforce Improvement with Immigrant Nurses.

Program brings diversity and experience to workforce

"The idea had started a long time ago with many of us in health care who were interesed in getting more diversity into the workplace, particularly into the RN workforce."

Nursing program gives immigrants path out of poverty

Judy Anderson is the director of WIIN. Her office walls at Clackamas Community College are decorated with ethnic dresses given to her by former students. And sitting on one of her shelves are tiny flags, representing the 27 nationalities of nurses who have come through this program from "all over, everything from Siberia to Micronesia!"

Only 12 to 14 students are selected each year for the one-year WIIN program. They learn communication and time-management skills and take refresher courses on nursing. Anderson says most of them work full time, go to school, and raise children.

"They love nursing. They want to help take care of patients. They are very hard workers. They have very complicated lives, in spite of everything, they overcome the obstacles. And almost all of them that we admit to the program actually end up with their nursing licenses." 

"We didn't know if we would be able to become nurses here. We didn't know if our English will be good enough for the patients. But the faith that Judy had in us, it was a lot."

Foreign-trained nurses help fill gap left by retiring health care workers

Nursing program gives immigrants path out of poverty

WIIN was one of 10 re-entry programs for foreign educated nurses around the country. Lisa Snodderly, the nursing recruitment director at Providence Health Care in Portland, Oregon, has hired a number of WIIN graduates. She notes that as nurses who entered the workforce in the 1960s and '70s begin to retire, the nation faces a shortage of caregivers. There are plenty of new nursing school graduates, but there's a growing need for experienced nurses.

Snodderly says that's where the WIIN program comes in.

"What I see that this group can offer us, besides the fact they can offer us diversity, is they have experience as a nurse, though in a very different setting in most cases, but they still have those skills where they learned how to prioritize, and all the stuff you have to learn as a new nurse, they bring that to the work environment."

Iryna Zhyga has those skills. She graduated from the WIIN program more than 3 years ago. Now she has a well-paying job at a nursing home in Portland.

Nursing program gives immigrants path out of poverty

When she arrived in the United States, she says, she never dreamed of this life. But her 16-year-old twin daughters have just graduated from high school. And a year ago, Zhyga bought her first home.

"When we bought it, I walked around and I looked at the walls and I think, well, I came with two suitcases and two children to this country, had nothing and I was able to grow here and have a place that I can call home."

It's a home that few immigrants and refugees ever experience. According to experts at the Migration Policy Institute, who study global migration trends, more than a million college-educated immigrants living in the United States are unemployed or working in minimum-wage jobs.

WIIN director Judy Anderson says programs like the Workforce Improvement with Immigrant Nurses can help change those statistics by giving immigrants like Iryna Zhyga a chance to leave poverty behind and return to a career path they thought was lost forever.

detour: an indirect or roundabout procedure, path, etc(迂回,繞道而行)

make ends meet:收支相抵

refresher course:進修課程

minimum-wage:最低工資

Related stories:

Young Americans serve nation in successor of Roosevelt-era program

Foreign backpackers flock to Australia to escape global recession

Telephone line helps returning servicemen readjust to civilian life

(Source: VOA 英語點津編輯)

 

 
英語點津版權說明:凡注明來源為“英語點津:XXX(署名)”的原創作品,除與中國日報網簽署英語點津內容授權協議的網站外,其他任何網站或單位未經允許不得非法盜鏈、轉載和使用,違者必究。如需使用,請與010-84883631聯系;凡本網注明“來源:XXX(非英語點津)”的作品,均轉載自其它媒體,目的在于傳播更多信息,其他媒體如需轉載,請與稿件來源方聯系,如產生任何問題與本網無關;本網所發布的歌曲、電影片段,版權歸原作者所有,僅供學習與研究,如果侵權,請提供版權證明,以便盡快刪除。
相關文章 Related Story
 
 
 
本頻道最新推薦
 
世界最長壽狗過21歲生日
“自帶酒水”如何表達
零和博弈 zero-sum game
網絡教育 webucation
英國慈善義工獲“世界最好工作”
翻吧推薦
 
論壇熱貼
 
如何翻譯別和我來這一套
為什么叫蹦的
別亂扔垃圾。怎么譯這個亂字呀?
橘子,橙子用英文怎么區分?
看Gossip Girl學英語