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PNAA Study Paints Portrait of Today's Filipino NursesDuring the serious nursing shortage of the 1960s and '70s, hundreds of nurses from the Philippines were brought to America to fill RN staffing gaps. Many of these immigrant nurses chose to stay permanently in the U.S. and went on to achieve successful careers as clinicians and nurse educators. But who exactly are today's Filipino nurses? What roles do they play within the U.S. health care system? What impact have they made on nursing practice in America?These are questions the Philippine Nurses Association of America (PNAA) hoped to answer when it embarked on a two-year project to conduct a national demographic study of Filipino nurses in the U.S. "While the contribution of Filipino nurses to health care in the United States has long been recognized, specific demographic data on Filipino nurses are negligible," explains PNAA board member Daisy M. Rodriguez, RN, MN, MPA, the study's principal investigator. In the project's initial stage, participating PNAA chapters surveyed nurses coast to coast, collecting data from a total of 347 respondents. Despite the small sample size, the results-which were presented at the 2002 PNAA National Convention in Philadelphia and published in the association's newsletter-contain some interesting findings:
The PNAA is currently in the process of gathering additional demographic
information to expand its database. Filipino nurses who would like to
participate in the survey should contact Daisy Rodriguez at 2130 Canyon
Crest Ave., San Ramon, CA 94583, fax (925) 735-3157, email daisrod@ compiled by the editors of Minority Nurse magazine
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