Filipino nurses advance careers, enhance skills in Saudi hospitals

Special Filipino nurses advance careers, enhance skills in Saudi hospitals
1 / 2
Filipino nurses are seen at work at a hospital in Riyadh, January 2024. (Mashora Salwang)
Special Filipino nurses advance careers, enhance skills in Saudi hospitals
2 / 2
Philippine Embassy in Riyadh Chargé d'Affaires Rommel Romato meets the top notchers of this year's Philippine Board of Nursing exams in Riyadh on July 2, 2024. (Philipine Embassy in Saudi Arabia)
Short Url
Updated 04 September 2024
Follow

Filipino nurses advance careers, enhance skills in Saudi hospitals

Filipino nurses advance careers, enhance skills in Saudi hospitals

MANILA: Filipino nurses who have been advancing their careers in Saudi Arabia say the Kingdom has offered them not only professional development, but also ways to enhance their skills and education.

There are an estimated 130,000 nurses from the Philippines employed in Saudi Arabia. Many of them began working before passing board exams — a process which in their home country takes many years.

In the Kingdom, nursing jobs have allowed them to be professionally active and continue their education at the same time.

“I worked only as a volunteer nurse in the Philippines before coming to work here,” said Mashora Salwang, a native of Zamboanga Del Sur in the southern Philippines, who has been working in Riyadh since 2010.

“Saudi Arabia has given me more opportunities than working in the Philippines ... Saudi Arabia has also given me the opportunity to advance my knowledge. When I worked here at King Fahad Medical City, I had the chance to travel to attend conferences locally and internationally.”

Salwang was among the top performers in this year’s licensure examination conducted by the Philippine Board of Nursing for health professionals working abroad.




Philippine Embassy in Riyadh Chargé d'Affaires Rommel Romato meets the top notchers of this year's Philippine Board of Nursing exams in Riyadh on July 2, 2024. (Philipine Embassy in Saudi Arabia)

Others who took the exam — and passed with flying colors — also link their success to working in the Kingdom.

“Saudis admire the work ethics of Filipinos ... They gave me the opportunity to start my career here, and there are also opportunities for growth,” said Joan Abiera, a nurse from the Bicol region working in a dermatology clinic in Riyadh.

“I moved here in 2009, so I’ve been working in Saudi for almost 15 years now. Before that, I worked as a nursing assistant in my province.”

For Aileen Rodriguez from Nueva Ecija, also a top performer in June’s nursing board exams, working in Saudi Arabia has been a way to develop an international career.

“If you are aspiring to work as a nurse (abroad), first choice is Saudi Arabia because you can get a lot of career opportunities here,” she told Arab News.

“Some nurses also come to work for a few years to acquire experience and then transfer to another country.”

Rodriguez has been working in Riyadh for the past eight years as a private duty nurse.

“My patient is the one who cheers me (on) when I’m studying, she keeps pushing me to do my best,” she said.

“The family of my patient, they are very good to me. They are treating me as one of them ... Saudi is accommodating to Filipinos.”

There are about 1 million Filipinos in Saudi Arabia, the fourth-largest group of expats in the Kingdom. They are also a main source of remittances to the Philippines.

Michael Angelo Mendoza, from Roxas City in the western Capiz province, has been working in Saudi Arabia for the past 10 years.

He chose the Kingdom to reunite with his father, who moved to Saudi Arabia for work when he was a young boy, but it was the job opportunities that made him stay.

He is a nurse in the dental and dermatology department at a clinic in Riyadh. “I find Saudi Arabia a safe place for workers to build their career,” Mendoza said.

“Filipino nurses have already made a good impression worldwide as really good in delivering quality nursing or healthcare services. And here in Saudi Arabia, they offer good salary, good compensation, and Saudi is now open and there are a lot of Filipino communities here.”

The Kingdom has been the top choice for Filipino nurses working abroad since at least 2021, according to data from the Philippine Department of Health.

“Their hospitals have really advanced technology and it’s really a good opportunity for us nurses to experience the new technology that they are using here,” Mendoza said.

“It’s really a good opportunity for us to experience and assist in these cases to learn and earn more experience. Now I’m living my dream to be a professional nurse and I also want to impart my knowledge like the professors I have met here in Saudi Arabia.”


Hundreds flee after Philippine volcano warning

Hundreds flee after Philippine volcano warning
Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Hundreds flee after Philippine volcano warning

Hundreds flee after Philippine volcano warning
  • About 300 residents of villages within four kilometers of the Kanlaon volcano crater were evacuated as a precaution
  • Kanlaon’s daily average emission of sulfur dioxide almost tripled to 9,985 tonnes on Tuesday
MANILA: Hundreds of people fled their homes in the Philippines on Wednesday after a volcano spurted harmful gases, an official said, as experts warned of a potential eruption.
About 300 residents of villages within four kilometers of the Kanlaon volcano crater in the center of the country were evacuated on Tuesday as a precaution, the local government of nearby Canlaon City said.
The evacuees have taken temporary shelter at schools and community centers away from the volcano, city information officer Edna Lhou Masicampo said on Wednesday.
“People from villages near the foot of the volcano have been complaining about the strong smell of sulfur,” Masicampo said, adding most residents are farmers.
Classes were suspended and some tourist spots in the city of around 60,000 people were closed on Wednesday due to the volcano warning.
Kanlaon’s daily average emission of sulfur dioxide almost tripled to 9,985 tonnes on Tuesday.
“This is the highest emission from the volcano recorded since instrumental gas monitoring began,” the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said in a statement.
“Current activity may lead to eruptive unrest,” it said, putting residents of the four villages at risk from red hot, swiftly moving ash clouds, “ballistic projectiles, rockfalls and others.”
Rising more than 2,400 meters (nearly 8,000 feet) above sea level on the central island of Negros, Kanlaon is one of 24 active volcanoes in the Philippines.
It has erupted 15 times in the past nine years.
Three hikers were killed in August 1996 due to ash ejection from Kanlaon.
The state volcanology agency raised the alert level for the volcano in June from one to two on a zero-to-five scale, warning more explosive eruptions were possible.
The Philippines is located in the seismically active Pacific “Ring of Fire,” which contains more than half the world’s volcanoes.

Kenya airport strike disrupts flights

Kenya airport strike disrupts flights
Updated 25 min 52 sec ago
Follow

Kenya airport strike disrupts flights

Kenya airport strike disrupts flights
  • Kenya Airways warned of delays and possible cancelations of flights for both departing and arriving passengers
  • Strike would continue until the government scraps a plan to lease the airport to India’s Adani Group for 30 years

NAIROBI: Passengers were left stranded at Kenya’s main airport on Wednesday as staff went on strike over a planned takeover by an Indian company.
The walk-out by the Kenyan Aviation Workers Union began at midnight, disrupting flights at Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA).
Queues of passengers were outside the airport on Wednesday, some sitting on their luggage, and there were lines of cars trying to access the area, AFP reporters said.
The union said the strike would continue until the government scrapped a plan to lease the airport to India’s Adani Group for 30 years in exchange for a $1.85 billion investment.
“The strike is on and all shifts have been suspended,” union leader Moses Ndiema told workers at the airport.
“Adani must go, that is not optional,” he said.
Kenya Airways warned of delays and possible cancelations of flights for both departing and arriving passengers.
Critics say the plan to lease JKIA to Adani will lead to job losses for local staff and rob taxpayers of future airport profits.
Freight and passenger fees from the airport account for more than five percent of Kenya’s GDP.
The Law Society of Kenya and the Kenya Human Rights Commission won a delay on the deal from the High Court on Monday, arguing that it lacked “transparency.”
Kenya’s government has defended the plan as necessary to refurbish JKIA.
It is one of Africa’s busiest hubs, handling 8.8 million passengers and 380,000 tons of cargo in 2022-23, but is often hit by power outages and leaking roofs.
Adani would add a second runway and upgrade the passenger terminal, according to the Kenya Airport Authority.


At least two dead, hundreds stranded in Thailand as floods hit north

At least two dead, hundreds stranded in Thailand as floods hit north
Updated 36 min 32 sec ago
Follow

At least two dead, hundreds stranded in Thailand as floods hit north

At least two dead, hundreds stranded in Thailand as floods hit north
  • The adverse weather, which comes in the wake of Typhoon Yagi — the most powerful storm in Asia this year, has impacted about 9,000 households in Thailand

BANGKOK: At least two people were killed and hundreds stranded in Thailand after heavy rains swept through two northern provinces, swelling rivers, inundating settlements and triggering mudslides, authorities said on Wednesday.
The adverse weather, which comes in the wake of Typhoon Yagi — the most powerful storm in Asia this year, has impacted about 9,000 households in Thailand, Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra said.
“Water currents are still strong,” she told reporters. “All agencies are prepared and when the current eases, they will go in immediately.”
The impacts of the storm have killed at least 143 people in Vietnam, where it made landfall on Saturday before moving westwards, with floods forcing the evacuation of thousands of residents living near the swelling Red River in the capital Hanoi.
Thailand’s Chiang Mai province experienced flash floods and mudslides, with two deaths recorded, according to its governor.
In the Mai Sai district of neighboring Chiang Rai province, which borders Myanmar, rubber boats were unable to reach some flooded areas where hundreds were stuck and awaiting help, said district chief Narongpol Kid-an.
“Helicopters will be used to evacuate stranded residents and deliver food and water,” he told Reuters.
A resident in the main town in Mae Sai, which has a population of over 28,000, said their group of three people was trapped on the second floor of a building after rising water submerged the lower level.
“We have not eaten anything since yesterday morning,” the resident said, asking not to be named.
“It is still raining heavily in Mae Sai. We hope a rescue team or somebody will come to help us.”


Flash flood sweeps away hamlet as Vietnam storm toll rises to 141 dead

Flash flood sweeps away hamlet as Vietnam storm toll rises to 141 dead
Updated 11 September 2024
Follow

Flash flood sweeps away hamlet as Vietnam storm toll rises to 141 dead

Flash flood sweeps away hamlet as Vietnam storm toll rises to 141 dead
  • Torrent of water buried Lang Nu hamlet with 35 families in mud and debris
  • Rescuers have recovered 16 bodies and are continuing the search for about 40 others

HANOI, Vietnam: A flash flood swept away an entire hamlet in northern Vietnam, killing 16 people and leaving dozens missing as deaths from a typhoon and its aftermath climbed to 141 on Wednesday.
Vietnamese state broadcaster VTV said the torrent of water gushing down from a mountain in Lao Cai province Tuesday buried Lang Nu hamlet with 35 families in mud and debris.
Only about a dozen are known so far to have survived. Rescuers have recovered 16 bodies and are continuing the search for about 40 others.
The death toll from Typhoon Yagi and its aftermath has climbed to 141 as 69 others remain missing and hundreds were injured, VTV said.
Yagi was the strongest typhoon to hit the Southeast Asian country in decades. It made landfall Saturday with winds of up to 149 kph (92 mph) and despite weakening on Sunday, downpours have continued and rivers remain dangerously high.
Floods and landslides have caused most of the deaths, many of which have come in the northwestern Lao Cai province, bordering China, where Lang Nu is located.


Dozens arrested as Melbourne anti-war protests turn violent

Dozens arrested as Melbourne anti-war protests turn violent
Updated 38 min 17 sec ago
Follow

Dozens arrested as Melbourne anti-war protests turn violent

Dozens arrested as Melbourne anti-war protests turn violent
  • Police were pelted with rocks, horse manure and bottles filled with liquid as they tried to protect attendees of the expo
  • Two dozen police officers required medical treatment and 33 people had been arrested for offenses

SYDNEY: Anti-war protesters and police clashed outside a defense exhibition in Australia’s second-largest city of Melbourne on Wednesday, with dozens arrested as police used sponge grenades, flash-bang devices and irritant sprays to control parts of the hostile crowd.
Police were pelted with rocks, horse manure and bottles filled with liquid as they tried to protect attendees of the expo, some of whom were assaulted by protesters, a Victoria state police spokesperson said in a statement. Two dozen police officers required medical treatment and 39 people had been arrested for offenses including assaulting, obstructing or hindering police, arson and blocking roads, Shane Patton Chief Commissioner of Victoria Police told a press conference.
Protesters lit fires in the street, disrupted traffic and public transport, while missiles were thrown at several police horses but no serious injuries were reported, police said.
Some police have been spat at by protesters, whilst other officers have been sprayed with a liquid irritant, some of which was identified as acid, Patton added. “This is the type of disgusting behavior that we saw today from a group who were intent on confronting us,” he said.
“If you wish to come and protest, do so peacefully. We will not tolerate criminal behavior.”
About 1,200 people attended the protest outside the venue hosting the biennial Land Forces International Land Defense Exposition, authorities said. Many chanted pro-Palestine slogans through loud speakers and waved Palestine flags while others had signs and flags representing other conflicts and causes, video showed. Dumpsters were pushed toward police lines and one protester climbed on top of a truck that was stopped at traffic lights.
Australian media reported it was the largest police operation in Melbourne since 2000 when Australia’s second-largest city hosted the World Economic Forum. About 1,000 exhibiting organizations from 31 countries are expected to attend the event through Friday, which the organizers said was Australia’s largest defense expo.
Some attendees were doused in a red liquid by protesters, ABC News reported.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said people had the right to protest but had to do it in a peaceful manner.
“You don’t say you’re opposed to defense equipment by throwing things at police. They’ve got a job to do and our police officers should be respected at all times,” Albanese told Channel Seven.