PBBM To Sign 2025 Budget Bill December 30

Ang Pangulo ay nakatakdang pirmahan ang 2025 Budget Bill sa Disyembre 30, ayon sa PCO. Isang mahalagang hakbang para sa ating bansa.

DOT To Continue Building Sustainable Philippine Tourism

Patuloy ang DOT sa pagtataguyod ng sustainable na turismo sa Pilipinas. Ang inklusibong industriya ay layunin ni Tourism Secretary Christina Frasco.

Taiwan Opens New Tourism Info Center In Philippines

Ang Taiwan ay naglunsad ng TTIC sa Pilipinas, nag-aalok ng makabagong impormasyon ukol sa paglalakbay sa kanilang magandang isla.

Misamis Occidental Credits ‘5Ms’ For Economic, Social Growth

Ang "5Ms" ng Misamis Occidental ay susi sa kanilang matagumpay na pag-unlad sa ekonomiya at lipunan.

Oman Needs 350 Pinoy Nurses

LOOK: Oman is in need of more health care workers, particularly nurses, the Philippine Overseas Employment Office reported.
By The Philippine Post

Oman Needs 350 Pinoy Nurses

0
0

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

The Sultanate of Oman is in need of 350 health care workers, particularly nurses, the Philippine Overseas Employment Office (POLO) reported.

In a virtual forum late Friday afternoon, Labor Attaché Gregorio Abalos Jr. said the demand for Filipino workers in the health sector is due to the pandemic.

“There were two hospitals who visited our POLO, requesting for 350 nurses,” Abalos said, noting that the Apollo hospital needs 150 nurses while the Sultan Kabul Cancer Care hospital has requested 200 Filipino nurses.

He said they have told potential employers that Filipino medical workers are in demand.

“They (employers) have to make a good offer, otherwise the worker will be looking for higher offers in other countries,” he added.

Nurses in Oman earn a monthly salary of about 300 Omani rials (about PHP50,000), excluding accommodation expenses.

Abalos said his office has informed the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) regarding Oman’s need for health care workers (HCWs) and requested an exemption from the deployment cap set by the Philippine government.

“We were told by the POEA that the clamor of Oman is still within the limit,” he said.

The government has implemented a deployment cap of 6,500 on the sending of HCWs to other nations to ensure that the country has a sufficient number of medical workers amid the pandemic. (PNA)