• Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Services
Thursday, October 23, 2025
Fellow Nurses Africa
  • News
    • Health News
    • Nursing News
  • Nursing Jobs
  • Articles
  • Nursing Education
  • Events
    • Nursing Conferences
    • FNA Events
  • Nursing Research
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Health News
    • Nursing News
  • Nursing Jobs
  • Articles
  • Nursing Education
  • Events
    • Nursing Conferences
    • FNA Events
  • Nursing Research
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
Fellow Nurses Africa
No Result
View All Result

Canadian Nurses Leaving in High Numbers: A Reality Check for Africa’s ‘Japa Generation’

Lola Osunde by Lola Osunde
October 23, 2025
in Global Nursing
0

Fellow Nurses Africa | Lagos, Nigeria | 23 October, 2025

As thousands of Canadian nurses leave their jobs amid burnout, low morale, and staff shortages, Africa must pause and ask what happens when the “promised land” becomes a cautionary tale?

Canada, often praised for its advanced healthcare system ? is facing a deepening nursing crisis.

Despite years of recruitment drives and international hiring efforts, nurses across the country are leaving their jobs in high numbers, citing burnout, emotional fatigue, unsafe staffing ratios, and a lack of support.

In British Columbia alone, the government announced plans to hire over 8,000 nurses and implement nurse-to-patient ratios to ease the strain. Yet nurses on the ground say the situation remains dire many are working double shifts, skipping breaks, and feeling emotionally detached from the job they once loved.

Retention, not recruitment, is the problem. Thousands of nurses, both Canadian-trained and internationally educated, are quitting hospital work altogether, with some transitioning to non-clinical roles or leaving the profession entirely.

The irony is striking, while countries like Nigeria, Ghana, and Kenya continue to lose nurses to international migration in search of greener pastures, Canada itself is struggling to keep the ones it already has.

A nurse in Manitoba told local media:

“We’re not lazy; we’re tired. We’re caring for too many patients, working unsafe hours, and losing ourselves in the process.”

Many nurses report chronic exhaustion, moral distress, and a sense that their calling has become survival.

Mental health challenges are on the rise, and union leaders warn that the crisis could deepen if governments fail to prioritize safe working environments and staff well-being over short-term recruitment drives.

Even internationally trained nurses, many from Africa, have voiced frustration over lengthy licensing processes that leave them working in non-nursing roles for months or even years.

“They make it look glamorous from afar,” one nurse commented under a viral post, “but most of us are barely surviving, not thriving. Some days, it feels like we traded one broken system for another.”

Another nurse added, “If you’re coming here, come prepared mentally and emotionally. It’s not easy out here.”

For African nurses dreaming of relocation

This growing crisis in Canada offers an important lens for Africa’s “Japa generation”, the wave of professionals eager to migrate abroad in search of better opportunities.

For many, Canada is seen as the ultimate destination, better pay, advanced technology, and respect for the nursing profession.

If a country with Canada’s infrastructure and healthcare funding is struggling to keep nurses happy and healthy, then the challenge is not just where nurses work but how nursing is valued globally.

Lessons Africa should take seriously

1. Retention is as critical as migration Training more nurses without improving local working conditions will only deepen the cycle of loss.

2. Respect is currency When nurses feel undervalued or overworked, no system can sustain quality care.

3. Mental health is non-negotiable Burnout is not a Western problem; it’s a human one. Nurses everywhere deserve to rest, recover, and feel supported.

4. Policy before poaching African governments must strengthen nursing policies to ensure staying home is as dignified as leaving.

Canada’s current experience is not an isolated story; it’s a mirror for the world. It shows what happens when healthcare systems treat nurses as numbers rather than people, and when compassion becomes a commodity instead of a core value.

Africa must pay attention. The lesson here isn’t to discourage migration, but to redefine what “better” really means for nurses.

👉 Want to stay updated on changes like this? Join our WhatsApp Channel .

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X

Like this:

Like Loading...
Continue Reading
Tags: Nursing
Previous Post

10 Common Early Career Mistakes Nurses Make And How To Avoid Them

Next Post

KNH Surgeons Perform World’s Largest Breast Reduction on 17-Year-Old Girl

Related Posts

Missouri Man Arrested After Pointing Gun at Nurse During Loud Music Dispute Outside Columbia Hospital
Global Nursing

Missouri Man Arrested After Pointing Gun at Nurse During Loud Music Dispute Outside Columbia Hospital

5 days ago
Redefining Strength: The Growing Role of Men in Modern Nursing
Global Nursing

Redefining Strength: The Growing Role of Men in Modern Nursing

6 days ago
Fortis College Unveils 15-Month Nursing Program in Utah to Address Global Shortage
Global Nursing

Fortis College Unveils 15-Month Nursing Program in Utah to Address Global Shortage

1 week ago
Joint Commission Recognizes Nurse Staffing as a National Performance Goal for 2026 — A New Era for Healthcare Safety
Global Nursing

Joint Commission Recognizes Nurse Staffing as a National Performance Goal for 2026 — A New Era for Healthcare Safety

1 week ago
Family Seeks Justice After 83-Year Old Found Dead in Nursing Home Freezer
Global Nursing

Family Seeks Justice After 83-Year Old Found Dead in Nursing Home Freezer

1 week ago
How Electronic Health Records (EHRs) Are Transforming Nursing Care
Global Nursing

How Electronic Health Records (EHRs) Are Transforming Nursing Care

1 week ago
Former Nursing Assistant Indicted for Negligent Homicide After Patient’s Fatal Fall in Baton Rouge
Global Nursing

Former Nursing Assistant Indicted for Negligent Homicide After Patient’s Fatal Fall in Baton Rouge

1 week ago
Nurse Denied Benefits After HIPAA Breach – Discloses Teenager’s Pregnancy Status to Parents Without Their Consent
Global Nursing

Nurse Denied Benefits After HIPAA Breach – Discloses Teenager’s Pregnancy Status to Parents Without Their Consent

2 weeks ago
Next Post
KNH Surgeons Perform World’s Largest Breast Reduction on 17-Year-Old Girl

KNH Surgeons Perform World’s Largest Breast Reduction on 17-Year-Old Girl

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow our socials

Facebook X-twitter Tiktok Instagram Youtube
  • ABOUT FELLOW NURSES AFRICA
  • CONTACT US
  • ADVERTISEMENTS
  • EXAM PREPARATIONS
  • TERMS OF SERVICE
  • BLOG
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • COOKIES POLICY

All rights reserved. 2025 © Fellow Nurses Africa

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Health News
    • Nursing News
  • Nursing Jobs
  • Articles
  • Nursing Education
  • Events
    • Nursing Conferences
    • FNA Events
  • Nursing Research
  • Contact Us
  • About Us

© 2025 Fellow Nurses Africa

WhatsApp us

%d