TORONTO — The Ontario government is bringing more nurses into the health care system by investing more than $500 million to educate new nurses and increasing opportunities for current nurses to access specialized training to upskill while on the job. The province is also working with the College of Nurses of Ontario (CNO) to reduce barriers for internationally educated nurses, allowing them to register to work in Ontario faster and start caring for Ontarians sooner.
“Our government continues to build up Ontario’s current and future health care workforce as we add thousands of new nurses across the province,” said Sylvia Jones, Deputy Premier and Minister of Health. “By building on our actions to date to bolster the nursing workforce, we are strengthening health system capacity and ensuring Ontarians continue to have access to timely, high-quality care, where and when they need it.”
To build on the nearly 100,000 new nurses the province has added to the workforce since 2018, the government is investing $510 million over the next three years to give more than 20,000 health care learners the opportunity to work in hospitals and home and community care organizations by the end of 2027.
The Enhanced Extern Program (EEP) helps hospitals hire qualifying nursing, medical, respiratory therapy, paramedic, physiotherapy, and occupational therapy students and internationally educated nurses to work in a hospital in an unregulated capacity, under the supervision of regulated care providers.
The Supervised Practice Experience Partnership (SPEP) program provides internationally educated nurses the opportunity to demonstrate their current nursing knowledge, skill and language proficiency while working to meet the requirements to enter practice as a nurse.
To support nurses who want to maximize their skills and experience, the government is also investing over $1.6 million over the next year to support more than 1,600 registered nurses with up to $1,000 towards tuition costs as they train to prescribe medications for certain conditions, such as contraception, immunizations, smoking cessation, and topical wound care.
Additionally, beginning April 1, 2025, internationally educated nurses will be able to move through the CNO registration process faster. Internationally educated nurses who have a baccalaureate degree and practical nurses who have a diploma will no longer need to go through the lengthy education assessment step in the registration process, saving them up to $7,500 and allowing them to start practising in Ontario sooner.
Through Your Health: A Plan for Connected and Convenient Care, the Ontario government continues to take bold and decisive action to support the province’s highly-skilled nursing workforce and ensure people and their families have access to high-quality care where and when they need it, closer to home.
Quick Facts
Since 2018, Ontario has seen a record-breaking number of new health care professionals join the workforce, adding nearly 100,000 new nurses with another 30,000 nurses currently studying at Ontario colleges and universities.
Since 2021, over 7,400 health care students have participated in the EEP, creating much-needed capacity in the system and a pool of new graduates who are more experienced and prepared to work as they begin their health care careers.
Since its launch in January 2022, the SPEP program has funded more than 3,400 internationally educated nurses.
To support safe practice, all internationally educated nurses will take a course to ensure they successfully transition into the Ontario health care system.
Since expanding the role of registered nurses to prescribe medications, 291 registered nurses have completed the training and are authorized to prescribe.
Ontario is investing $743 million over three years to continue to address immediate health care staffing needs, as well as to grow the workforce for years to come.
Quotes
"The College of Nurses of Ontario continues to proactively enhance our registration processes for all applicants wishing to practice in the province. These initiatives align with our commitment to streamline fair and inclusive assessments, ensuring a smoother registration journey for aspiring nurses. By continuously analyzing system needs, we create equitable solutions that benefit applicants and allow us to remain responsive to the needs of patients and the health care system as a whole."
- Silvie Crawford
Registrar/Executive Director & CEO, College of Nurses of Ontario
"The Ontario Hospital Association (OHA) welcomes the government’s strong commitment to educating and training nurses and growing the province’s health care workforce. Building on the success of existing programs that support the training and upskilling of nurses, these investments will help enhance access to timely, high-quality care. As the province’s nursing workforce continues to grow, hospitals are proud to support the ongoing training and development of Ontario’s health care professionals."
- Anthony Dale
President and CEO, Ontario Hospital Association
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