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       #Post#: 3023--------------------------------------------------
       Geriatric nursing jobs in Jamaica now hiring US$700 per week
       By: easybread Date: September 26, 2021, 8:29 am
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       Geriatric nursing jobs in Jamaica, Hotel housekeeper jobs now
       hiring in Jamaica. Practical nursing jobs now hiring in Jamaica.
       Free nursing schools Jamaica. Move to New York, Florida or
       Vancouver B.C.
       Migrate to Toronto Canada from Jamaica.
 (HTM) https://www.hotel-online.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/ResettingHousekeeping_02082021.jpg
       Some types of nursing jobs include practical nurse, geriatric
       nurse, school nurse, hotel nurse etc
       Earn up to $25.00 an hour. Free housing and travel.
       Please send an email to: traveljobsworld@gmail.com
       Whatsapp# 604 430 0685
 (HTM) https://partners.altervista.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/jacuzzi.jpg
       Practical nurses support patients by providing basic nursing and
       medical care. Due to the nature of patient care, practical
       nurses perform many duties depending on where they choose to
       work. ... Taking vital signs and recording them in patient
       charts. Performing immunizations and other injections.
 (HTM) https://cosynewhomes.boards.net/thread/53/practical-nursing-jamaica-migrate-florida
       Practical nursing jobs in Jamaica now hiring.
       Montego Bay, St James
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t135-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-montego-bay-st-james-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Kingston
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t136-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-kingston-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Half Way Tree, St. Andrew
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t137-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-half-way-tree-st-andrew-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Mandeville, Manchester
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t138-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-mandeville-manchester-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Spanish Town, St. Catherine
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t139-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-spanish-town-st-catherine-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Morant Bay, St. Thomas
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t140-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-morant-bay-st-thomas-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Port Maria, St Mary
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t141-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-port-maria-st-mary-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Port Antonio, Portland
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t142-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-port-antonio-portland-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       St. Ann’s Bay, St. Ann
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t143-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-st-anns-bay-st-ann-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Falmouth, Trelawny
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t144-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-falmouth-trelawny-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Montego Bay, St. James
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t145-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-montego-bay-st-james-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Lucea Hanover
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t146-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-lucea-hanover-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Savanna-La-Mar, Westmoreland
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t147-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-savanna-la-mar-westmoreland-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Black River, St. Elizabeth
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t148-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-black-river-st-elizabeth-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       May Pen, Clarendon
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t149-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-may-pen-clarendon-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Ocho Rios, Jamaica
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t150-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-ocho-rios-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Negril, Jamaica
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t151-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-negril-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Old Harbour, Jamaica
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t152-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-old-harbour-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Portmore, Jamaica
 (HTM) https://caregiverjobscanada.forumotion.com/t153-practical-nursing-jobs-now-hiring-in-portmore-jamaica-migrate-to-canada-and-florida
       Jamaicans shattering the ceilings in Canada’s healthcare system
 (HTM) https://partners.altervista.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Mom-smiling-with-child-495x400.jpg
       At age nine, Dionne Sinclair was told by her Jamaican primary
       school educator, ‘Teacher Thomas’, that she was her “Scholarship
       Girl”, and that title directed her life throughout her
       illustrious career in the medical field in Canada.
       Sinclair, who has made history by being named vice-president of
       Complex Care & Recovery & Chief Nursing Executive of Ontario’s
       largest mental health facility, the Centre for Addiction and
       Mental Health (CAMH), is one of the few black women in Canada’s
       healthcare system in such a position.
       On July 26, she steps into her new position, where she will have
       3,000 people reporting to her, while managing a budget of C$92
       million.
       Making the massive move to CAMH straight out of the Southlake
       Regional Hospital, Toronto, where she served as Multi-site
       Director in Diversity and Cultural Advancement, identifying gaps
       and developing strategies to create more just and equitable
       workplaces, the Resort, Manchester-born nurse, who holds a
       master’s in healthcare management, was forced to leave Canadian
       high school in 10th grade because of her accent; instead, she
       was told to take up vocational training.
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       LIFE-CHANGING INFLUENCE
       Had it not been for Teacher Thomas’ influence, which spurred
       Sinclair’s determination, the advice from her Canadian high
       school guidance counsellor that she was not college or
       university material would probably have been realised, but
       scholarship-oriented students are not easily dissuaded,
       particularly if they are coming from a solid foundation, and
       Sinclair had that in her favour.
       “We were told to get our education in high school, so we, my
       brother Steve and I, were put in a technical school in London,
       Ontario, called HB Beale. I went into practical nursing and he
       did sheet metal work,” Sinclair told The Sunday Gleaner.
       Hearing that the only education she could qualify for was high
       school was something Sinclair said never occurred to her at the
       time.
       “An adult saying I am going to be done in high school and I
       never had to do any more school, I thought, ‘wow, what a sweet
       deal’,” she recalled.
       The black and Caribbean students were not alone, though. Anyone
       who didn’t speak ‘English’, such as the Asians, were put into
       dry cleaning and the Spanish into the hospitality sector so they
       could change the sheets in the hotels. This was the 1980s in
       London, Ontario, where Sinclair’s parents moved to from Jamaica.
       But, like a true trojan, the five-feet-four-inches tall woman
       did exceptionally well in the Registered Practical Nursing (RPN)
       programme, actually topping her class and went further,
       outpacing her peers in the provincial exam to get her nursing
       licence, inspiring an unbiased teacher who recommended her to a
       diploma class at Fanshawe College.
       And that was all the encouragement Sinclair needed to become a
       registered nurse. Of course, the stumbling blocks were not out
       of her way. She had to tutor herself in 11th, 12th and 13th
       grade physics, biology and chemistry, because she had only made
       it to high school.
       No easy nut to crack, her tenacity and diligence paid off, and
       today she quips about the struggle “dissecting the mitochondria
       (membrane-bound cell organelles that generate most of the
       chemical energy needed to power the cell’s biochemical
       reactions) into something, something”.
       Entering two years of college at the University of Western
       Ontario without the requisite subjects, Sinclair still graduated
       with a 95 per cent average, “because I am Teacher Thomas’
       scholarship girl and I could not fail”.
       By then she had become a mother of two, and knowing their future
       was in her hands, she said failure was just not an option. Her
       parents were their guardian angels and like Jamaican families
       are renowned for, helped with the kids, while Sinclair was
       awarded her Bachelor of Science in Nursing.
       UPWARD MOBILITY
       The country girl from the cool hills of Manchester, where today
       the mangoes fall from the trees during season because there
       aren’t enough mouths to eat, graduated with her BSc, and
       immediately decided she couldn’t go back to bedpans in the
       hospitals.
       It has been upward mobility since. She worked in the prison
       system as head nurse, taking the first institution she handled
       out of paper into automation. Within a few years, the Ministry
       of Corrections saw her worth and transferred her to Ottawa to
       set up an infirmary on a hospital wing inside the jail there.
       Slowly, Sinclair became an agent of change in every environment
       she was placed, and because she was ambitious she couldn’t
       settle for anything that seemed stagnant. She had climbed the
       highest ladder in the system as healthcare coordinator and moved
       on next to the Royal Ottawa Hospital as a supervisor.
       Again, she knew what she could bring to the table and in two
       years in quality improvement, she helped them through successful
       accreditation. Her next stint was at Humber River Hospital,
       where she met her mentor, Paula Villafana, director of mental
       health and addictions at the medical facility.
       The rest is history, she said. “Paula saw my potential and she
       gave me a lot of leadership development, by coaching me and
       encouraging me when I decided to leave to become a director
       elsewhere.”
       Sinclair moved into the world of directorship and started her
       first post in this new realm as director of complex care at St
       Vincent Hospital, where she had 330 beds, and managers and
       supervisors reporting to her directly.
       At age 53, this Jamaican girl has shattered all the ceilings
       ever hovering over her head.
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