Background
Bridging program for nurses educated outside the EU/EEES working in Sweden
Aim
Methods
Procedure
Variable | Persons (N = 11) |
---|---|
Female | 8 |
Men | 3 |
Age (years) | |
29–39 years | 5 |
40–50 years | 5 |
51–61 years | 1 |
Migrating to Sweden | |
Year 2003–2009 | 3 |
Year 2012–2018 | 8 |
Place of birth | |
Ethiopia | 2 |
Gambia | 1 |
Iran | 1 |
Belarus | 2 |
Syria | 2 |
Bulgaria | 1 |
Kyrgyzstan | 1 |
Armenia | 1 |
Country where nursing training was completed | |
Ethiopia | 2 |
Gambia | 1 |
Iran | 1 |
Belarus | 2 |
Syria | 2 |
Turkey | 1 |
Russia | 1 |
Armenia | 1 |
Data collection
Data analysis
Main themes | Sub-themes |
---|---|
1. Return to nursing | 1. Motivation and determination |
2. Support from others | |
2. The bridging program as a tool for transition to nursing in Sweden | 1. New learnings |
2. Disappointments, achievements and future plans |
Results
Return to nursing
Motivation and determination
You just have to keep trying and stay curious [ … ] and study like I do now. I’m not a person who says, ‘Okay I’m finished one with my education’ and close all books. No! I read every day, because I can read this paper today and then tomorrow [when I read it again] I will find new information that I didn’t find yesterday. [ … ] To learn a new language when you’re an adult is not easy, but we learn every day. I spend time with colleagues and Swedish people [to learn]. (P1).
I started a course in basic Swedish [Swedish as a second language, SSL]. After one month, in March, I started to work as an assistant nurse, employed by the hour, and studied at the same time. When I finished basic Swedish, I was employed. I continued to study SSL levels 1, 2 and 3 as distance learning courses while working 85% at a retirement home. (P2)
Support from others
They [officials at the Swedish public employment agency] asked me: ‘How did you manage to get a trainee position without our help?’ There were not pleased and wondered how I had managed to sidestep them. But I said, I’m here and I need your signature. I will not leave before I get the signature because I have found a trainee position. (P3)
It was just a coincidence that I was accepted [to the language training program for newly arrived healthcare professionals]. I was playing football and a friend accidentally hit me over the ear, so I had to go to the district health care center. The nurse at the center knew I was a nurse and told me about the local project and she signed me up for it. [And later] I was accepted for the course. (P4)
Interviewer: What was it like to attend the bridging program while having small children, what did that demand from you?Participant: Her [daughter’s] dad is with her all the time. If I need to relax and study, he’s with her. Sometimes, as a mother, I think that he is responsible for her and it is not my problem because I am a student. (P5)
We all have different skills, experiences and capabilities but it was a really good student group because we worked together and helped each other. Some had worked for many years [as nurses] and others had not [ …] as a whole it was a really good group, we cooperated and assisted each other. [ …] We come from different countries and have different knowledge so of course we are different, but we give information, become friends and study together. (P6)
The bridging program as a tool for transition to nursing in Sweden
New learnings
The difference is that you must consider the whole person, not just the disease. I must always ask the patient before I do anything, get consent if I wish to examine him and ask if he wants the treatment. The patients have a right to decline treatment. That was most important to learn, that I must ask the patient before I do anything. It is different in Syria, where the patient is treated without consent. He is there [at the hospital] and [therefore] accepts treatment. (P7)
I didn’t learn much new about the medical aspects [of nursing] but I learned a lot about the [organisation of the] medical system and routines, how to write in the journals etc., because that is different everywhere. The medical aspects are universal, so I didn’t learn new things because I had already done so. (P10)
Clinical training is difficult, but it gets easier once you know more about your role, when I know what my job assignments are and what assignments the doctor has. But it takes time, I need more time [in clinical training] to feel confident, or how to put it. [ …] You learn in daily practice. If a group needs support for example, who does that? Is it perhaps the doctor? Or the assistant nurse? Or me? (P4)
Those who work in medical wards use their special concepts and those who work in surgery have theirs. That is why I have suggested that the clinical training needs to last at least six months to give us a chance to see different wards. For example, I only spent ten days in home care and one month in primary care. That was not a lot of time [to learn]. (P4)
I would put more focus on documentation. I think most of us have inadequate knowledge, not just me. [ …] When you sit down [to do it] you don’t know which box [to check] or what to write. It is difficult. I see how competent the nurses are. But I panic. It takes time for me and it stresses me out. [ …] Perhaps my colleagues will say ‘you have spelled this wrong or made a mistake here’. (P9)
Disappointments, achievements and future plans
Sometimes they [supervisors of clinical practice] do not understand what the bridging program is and the [competency] level we have. I tried to explain to my supervisor that I was not there for language training but for the bridging program and that I was already an educated nurse. But for four weeks she only addressed me as a ‘language learner’ [språkpraktikant]. (P7)
I was nervous up until the last day. When the examiner told me that I had passed [the program] I couldn’t believe what I’d heard so I had to ask her again. It was such an amazing feeling! I am proud and very glad that this was possible because it was a long journey, a really hard journey. (P3)
In due time, I plan to continue my education and become a specialist nurse. [ …] Primarily to specialize as a district nurse, but it depends … perhaps specializing in diabetic care, asthmatic care or something like that. (P8)
My idea is to work at the hospital for a couple of years and then if all goes as planned, I will continue my education. [ …] My main interest is to specialize as a nurse in intensive care. (P6)