Lakehead University -- nursing the industry back to health.

AuthorRoss, Ian
PositionTop Post-secondary Programs

The demand for nurses has never been higher in Canada.

With the gap between supply and demand for nurses expected to balloon to 78,000 by 2011, it's a job hunter's market for Lakehead University students.

"Any one of our graduates that wants to be employed, can be employed," says Karen Poole, director of Lakehead's 600-student School of Nursing.

"There are vacancies across the country and our graduates are being sought after by other countries as well."

Although the need for nurses outstrips the ability of post-secondary schools to provide them, there are limitations for Lake-head. Their intake of students in limited by the number of clinical placements they can find for students.

"There's far more demand than we can actually accommodate," says Poole. "But because clinical placements are an important segment of the nursing education, we are limited by how many students we can place within Thunder Bay for first three years."

Queen's Park has invested heavily in nursing programs, promising all 2007 nursing graduates will find employment in Ontario.

With the average age of a Lakehead nursing class is in the mid to late-20s, many now view the profession as viable career choice.

The pay is nothing to sneeze at either. According to the Ontario Nurses' Association salary grid, starting salaries for Registered nurses range between $23.80 and $26.80 an hour.

Easily the most popular program is their four-year Bachelor of Science in Nursing offered with Confederation College with space for 110 students.

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About half of their students come from northwestern Ontario with the rest...

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