City
Epaper

Kerala groups to help Indian nurses get placement in Germany

By IANS | Published: June 11, 2021 11:57 PM

Thiruvananthapuram, June 11 With Germany having over 1.3 lakh nursing jobs, Kerala-based philanthropic organisations, with presence in both ...

Open in App

Thiruvananthapuram, June 11 With Germany having over 1.3 lakh nursing jobs, Kerala-based philanthropic organisations, with presence in both countries, have decided to utilise this opportunity to help financially disadvantaged Indian nurses get placements there.

Speaking to over phone from Germany, Thomas Vallomtharayil, a key mover of the project and a coordinator between the German and Indian governments for this humanitarian venture, said this year, they expect about 100 Indian nurses to get placements.

"The placements will be offered free after assessing the financial position of the nurses. This is open for BSc nurses and also for general nurses and the first condition is they should have passed A1/A2 or B1/B2 levels of German language. We are offering free German classes. Those who are having work experience will have an edge," said Vallomtharayil, who hails from Thiruvalla here, but has been in Germany since 1973 and runs a dialysis centre at Castrop-Rauxel, about 70 km from Dusseldorf.

He said at present they have centres (www.germancareacademy.eu) where German is taught to aspiring nurses at Thiruvalla and are opening at Thiruvananthapuram, Bhopal, Bengaluru, Assam and Gurugram shortly.

"If a nurse from India gets a direct job offer from the German government, that nurse will have to spend Rs 3 lakh and if it is through an agent, the rates can be as high as Rs 15 lakh. We will not charge any service charge or agency fee and if necessary, we will support the living expenses when the nurse attends the German language course," added Vallomtharayil.

The participants in this philanthropic activity includes charitable organisation Abhayam, the Indo-German Centre for Health Care Sustainability (IGCHS) and the Vallomtharayil family.

Vallomtharayil also pointed out that the A1 and A2 German language courses will be handled by Indian teachers and for the B levels, they will bring in German teachers through online lessons and for an average student, all it requires is 6 months to pass the B levels.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Castrop-RauxelCentre for health care sustainabilityThomas vallomtharayilThiruvananthapuram
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalKerala: Three People Murdered in Separate Incidents

NationalKerala: 55-Year Old British Surfer Dies at Varkala Beach in Thiruvananthapuram

NationalLok Sabha Election 2024: PM Narendra Modi Is Expected To Campaign in Wayanad

LifestyleKerala Begins International Surfing Fest in Varkala

EntertainmentKerala: Thalapathy Vijay's Car Vandalised After Superstar Arrives in Thiruvananthapuram (Watch Video)

Health Realted Stories

HealthScientists find potential treatment target for leading cause of blindness

Health65 pc of children in South Korea spend 'excessive' hours on studies: Survey

HealthMen at high risk of early death, women face more poor health: Lancet study

HealthDangerous lead levels found in kids activity kit sold by Chinese e-com giant

HealthLebanon reports outbreak of hepatitis A in eastern region