Welcome to My Site

If this is your first visit, welcome! This site is devoted to my life experiences as a Filipino-American who immigrated from the Philippines to the United States in 1960. I came to the US as a graduate student when I was 26 years old. I am now in my mid-80's and thanks God for his blessings, I have four successful and professional children and six grandchildren here in the US. My wife and I had been enjoying the snow bird lifestyle between US and Philippines after my retirement from USFDA in 2002. Macrine(RIP),Me and my oldest son are the Intellectual migrants. Were were born in the Philippines, came to the US in 1960 and later became US citizens in 1972. Some of the photos and videos in this site, I do not own. However, I have no intention on infringing on your copyrights. Cheers!

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

The Nurses and Physicians with Filipino Ancestry in the US Health Care System

 

Macrine's(RIP) BS Nursing Graduation, Holy Name College, Oakland, CA 1979

I have always plan to write in my blogs about the Filipino-American Nurses here in the US. The subject is closed to my heart and soul, since my late spouse, Macrine Nieva Jambalos Katague was a Nurse- a profession that she loved. 

One of Macrine dreams when she was a child in the Philippines was to be a nurse. Because of her parents wish she did not pursue a nursing career in her college years. It was only in the late 1970's when our kids were all in college and high school, she decided to go back to nursing school. She earned her Bachelors Degree in Nursing in 1979 here in the US specializing in public health ( visiting nurse) then to Quality Assurance Nursing a few years before she retired. The site below is her community involvement not only as nurse but as a US citizen with Filipino ancestry.

https://whyretireinthephilippines.blogspot.com/2021/03/remembering-macrine-j-katague-through.html 

Nursing has been in the blood of the Jambalos Clan as well as the Katague clan. Two of Macrine younger sisters were Nurses here in the US( Philippine trained- both are now retired). Two of her first cousins on the Jambalos clan also served as nurses here in the US. On my side of the family, two of my nephews are currently nurses. One is in the US and the other in UK. I have two nieces that are also nurses. One is in the US and the other in Canada. Macrine has a niece who is a US trained /educated nurse.  I have other distant relatives and Filipino-American friends who are or were nurses and physicians here in the US, The Middle East, Europe and Canada.      

After the U.S. colonized the Philippines in the late 19th century, the country has relied on Filipino health care workers to mend the staffing gaps in America’s patchwork health care system, especially in times of medical crisis. Since 1960, over 150,000 Filipino nurses have migrated to the U.S. In 2019, one out of 20 registered nurses in the U.S. was trained in the Philippines. There are a few I know that are US educated and trained like Macrine and her niece.

“Without Filipino nurses, the U.S. health care system would have been paralyzed,” says Leo-Felix Jurado, a professor and department chair of nursing at William Paterson University, tells TIME. “It would have been almost impossible for the health care system to have safely existed.”

From AIDS to COVID-19, America’s Medical System has a long history of relying on Filipino Nurses to fight on the front lines.

Just recently you may have seen a grim statistic : 32% of U.S. registered nurses who died of COVID-19 by September 2020 were of Filipino descent, even though they only make up 4% of nurses in the United States. Yet an event like the pandemic is disproportionately likely to affect Filipino-American families: Approximately a quarter of working Filipino-Americans are front line healthcare workers.

Filipino nurses have also faced exploitation and wage discrimination—a long history that persists today. Jurado says fraudulent recruiting agencies and even some American health care facilities have lured Filipino nurses with false promises of opportunities or higher pay, and later forcing them to work long hours in unsafe working conditions, sometimes with threats of revoking their visas. In 2019, 200 Filipino nurses won a human trafficking lawsuit in which they alleged that the owners of a group of New York nursing homes were not paid the wages promised in their contracts and were forced to work in unsafe conditions with inadequate staffing.

To this day, foreign-educated nurses are frequently sent to hospitals where it is difficult to recruit American-born nurses, including public hospitals in inner cities and health care facilities in rural areas that are frequently understaffed and under-resourced.

“These physicians and nurses work in communities with workers that are the essential workers who don’t have these white-collar protections. And they’re working in hospitals that don’t have all the equipment,” says Eram Alam an assistant professor in the history of medicine at Harvard University. “All of these things are working together, and I think all of these things are suggestive of who is considered to be disposable in the United States.” For details read:

https://time.com/6051754/history-filipino-nurses-us/

https://www.sciencefriday.com/segments/filipino-nurses-america-medical-system/

I salute all Filipino-American nurses/physicians in the US and in other parts of the world for their service specially those who are front line workers in the fight against the Covid-19 pandemic. May your tribe increase!!    

 

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