July 25, 2023
An alarming crisis is looming on our healthcare horizon, with forecasts of a mass nursing exodus over the next five to 10 years from a system that is already woefully short-staffed. For a combination of reasons, up to 20 percent of registered nurses (900,000) plan to leave the profession by 2027. This is a dire predicament for a nation with an aging population.
The good news is that U.S. staffing companies are addressing the issue, recruiting skilled, foreign-educated nursing professionals to fill life-threatening gaps in care. Today, international workers make up one-sixth of the U.S. nursing workforce. But sadly, this story has a dark side.
The belief that America is the land of opportunity motivates the arrival of most foreign nurses. However, others see a different kind of opportunity: to exploit our legal system with frivolous lawsuits for a big payday.
In one case, a nurse filed a lawsuit alleging human trafficking violations against the agency that arranged her U.S. employment. Such accusations not only besmirch the reputation of an industry held to the highest ethical standards but also trivialize the horrific experiences of genuine survivors of human trafficking.
In the suit against Worldwide Healthstaff, a direct placement recruiting company, the nurse alleges that she and other nurses were never paid for overtime work. Nurses who failed to complete their contractual requirements were forced to repay the immigration costs incurred while acquiring a visa. In the nurse’s words, her experience was “indentured servitude.”
Unfortunately, this is a growing trend. In recent years, foreign health professionals have implicated staffing companies and other employers in multiple frivolous lawsuits, making increasingly outrageous claims. Even if their claims were factually accurate, these cases would amount to nothing more than a simple contract dispute. Workers voluntarily enter into an agreement to work in the United States for a predetermined duration in exchange for the staffing agency fronting costs for visa sponsorship and covered immigration, travel, training and temporary housing costs.
Read full article here: