READ HERE.
I was in a grocery once and a stranger, a fellow Cebuano approached me just to tell me about her dreadful experience as a nurse. She was a doctor here and worked as a nurse in the U.S. She recounted to me that they were made to work 12-16 hours a day with no day off. They sleep in common quarters. Since she was scared of losing her job by terminating the contract, i advised her to go moonlighting for another employer who will also sponsor her and go to a lawyer to discuss how to terminate her contract with her current employer leaving her without any legal impediments. A relative in Chicago also experienced the same thing and also did the same thing.
My cousin in Florida also told me the same thing but since they were well off she got an apartment right away.
Most petitioning employers have a tendency to exploit their petitioned nurses for all the monetary reasons.
What about those nurses who loaned money in the Philippines for pocket money? Since the dollar dropped, these nurses will take longer time to pay their debts than usual.
So you see folks, though it is more rewarding to be a nurse in the states, it is not all fairy tales here.
The dollar will continue to drop up to 38 pesos this year, so think about it. If I were a nurse right now, I'll save money to buy dollars and put off that American Dream for awhile because life is easier and happier in the Philippines.
I also personally think that teachers are better off than nurses, in terms of pay and stability.