Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,165,911 members, 7,863,140 topics. Date: Monday, 17 June 2024 at 12:09 PM

Anthney87's Posts

Nairaland Forum / Anthney87's Profile / Anthney87's Posts

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (of 16 pages)

Travel / Re: Uk Student Visa/tier 4 Pbs - Your Questions Answered Part 8 by anthney87: 10:50am On Apr 29, 2023
Please much presently is Visa fee for a single applicant and also for an applicant going with one dependent

Also how much for IHS

The person is going for M. Sc
Jobs/Vacancies / Re: Free YouTube subscribers by anthney87: 7:44pm On Feb 27, 2020
Simplecity:
Please Nairalanders this is not a get rich quick scheme .if you lack patience ,hardwork and teamwork spirit just carry your sef and go....las las na to kick you comot

Why is it requesting for opay account?
Travel / Re: Adventures Of A UK Bound Nurse by anthney87: 6:40pm On Jan 24, 2020
BarristerAlarig:




You could start your BNSC from Noun. Infact, you can start from 200lvl and spend just 4years.

The entrance requirement into Noun's Nursing program is either a RN/RM or a Bachelor's degree in any if the health/biological/life sciences.

How true is this assertion? Graduate from other biological courses? How do you now get licenced?
Travel / Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by anthney87: 8:50pm On Nov 02, 2019
please I need information on DRIMA OIL in Canada. Are they legit and real?
Travel / Re: Nigerian Nurses And Midwives With The Dream Of Working Abroad Let's Meet Here. by anthney87: 11:08am On Oct 17, 2019
please anyone with study material for IELTS? send to me @ Anthney87@gmail.com
I need them asap
Travel / Re: Nigerian Nurses And Midwives With The Dream Of Working Abroad Let's Meet Here. by anthney87: 8:51pm On Jun 08, 2019
Iamemblem:


This is not a market place. When God bless you, bless others too. I'm available to give interested freely
I need please. anthney87@gmail.com
Travel / Re: Nigerian Trained Midwives Working Abroad by anthney87: 11:47am On Jun 07, 2019
goch4sweet:


Hello house,
This post is about Nigerian Midwives who wish to apply to and work as a Registered midwife in New Zealand.

It is strictly for holders of Basic Midwifery certificate. That is, you studied Midwifery for 3yeara and got registered and licensed by the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria.

You must have worked for at least 3 years.

New Zealand offers good opportunuties for foreign midwives. A newly employed midwife in New Zealand earns 47000 New Zealand dollar per year. That's about 11,600,000 naira.

I will give a step by step procedure

1. Complete a three years Basic Midwifery study and get registered and licensed by the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria.

2. Get a valid (not expired) international passport ready. This cost around 25,000 naira from any immigration office near you.

2. At this point I advise you open a dollar account in any Nigerian bank so you can easily pay for your application and registration fee to New Zealand Midwifery Council. Don't panic. Its not difficult to open. Just go to aboki buy US$10 with 3500 naira. Go with your intl passport, electricity bill, 2 passport photographs to FCMB bank and they will do it for you. When you are ready to apply to New Zealand Midwifery Council, you must buy dollar from aboki and pay into this account to cover the amount you want to pay to New Zealand Midwifery Council. You need this because you can't pay to New Zealand Midwifery Council with your naira atm card.

3. Log in to www.midwiferycouncil.health.nz/midwives/becoming-registered-practise/internationally-qualified-midwives-application-guidelines to study the guidelines.

4. With your valid valid license and intl passport ready and your dollar account funded with at least US$200, you Log in to www.midwiferycouncil.health.nz and create an account in their website. You will be given a username and password which you will need to Log in anytime. Click on 'Apply' and select 'Oversea' and fill the form.

Select 'Assessment fee'. This is because your documents will be assessed first before proper registration. Assessment fee is 250 New Zealand dollar, about 62,000 naira.

On payment option, select credit card and fill in the details on your dollar account atm card.

If they confirm your credentials to be true, they will give you decision letter to pay for your registration and license. This cost 750 New Zealand dollar, about 186,000 naira.

5. After filling the form online, you will be asked to print out two forms. You will take one to Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria to fill and send directly to New Zealand Midwifery Council.

6. You will send the following documents by post to:
New Zealand Midwifery Council,
Level 5,
22 Willeston Street,
Wellington Central,
Wellington 6011,
New Zealand.

- A photocopy of the data page of your intl passport

- Photocopy of your RM Notification of Registration

- Certificate of Good Standing. This with be sent by Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria directly to New Zealand Midwifery Council. NMCN charges around 10,000 naira for this.

7. Your CV signed and dated. It must also state names, full addresses of all health facilities/clinics/hospitals you have worked, your position, ward and explain the functions of that ward/unit.

8. Meet the Principal of your school of Midwifery and ask them to send your transcripts to:
New Zealand Midwifery Council

Tell your Principal to add that your studies were conducted and you were examined in English language. This is very important. If this is not stated, you will be required to sit and take IELTS test.

9. Get a reference letter from one of your former or current employer stating your Midwifery ability and conduct.
Another reference letter can come from a person of high standing but not related to you. You will add it in the documents you will send to New Zealand Midwifery Council.

10. Get a medical certificate of physical and mental fitness from a government hospital.

11. Fill the Self Assessment Against Competencies form. This is the second form you printed from New Zealand Midwifery Council website. You are required to have conducted at least 30 deliveries by yourself, 20 as assistants and 50 as observer. You will answer some questions on antenatal, postnatal, episiotomy, deliveries, medical surgical nursing, etc.

12. Photocopy of your WAEC/NECO. Ask your school to give you a testimonial stating your academic background and conduct. Your secondary school must state that English was the medium of study and you were examined in English language. This is the condition New Zealand Midwifery Council accepts to exempt you from taking IELTS.

12. First School Leaving Certificate.

13. Completed and printed online application form from New Zealand Midwifery Council website.

Note: all Photocopies must be notarised by a solicitor. He must print his name, Complete address, phone number, rank/designation and state 'I certify this document a true copy of their originals' on each documents. If this is not done, it will be rejected. So get a lawyer do that.

Mail all documents to:
New Zealand Midwifery Council in the address stated above.

If you have further questions on registration and licensing, pls write to New Zealand Midwifery Council via info@midwiferycouncil.health.nz

After your qualification is assessed and New Zealand Midwifery Council informs you, the next step is to look for Midwives recruitment agency in New Zealand.

They will assist you get a job while you are still in Nigeria.

They will file application for your work permit, pay your visa fee, your flight ticket, receive you on arrival in New Zealand and arrange an accommodation for you. You will sign a contract to work for them for 2 or 3 years. This does not affect your salary oo.

If you are married, they can sponsor you, your husband and one child or you and two children without your husband.

If you have further questions on Sponsorship, pls write:

info@accent.net.nz

Or

enquiries@tonix.co.nz

Or

info@medacs.co.nz

Thanks. My fingers ache.


Good news o Nigerian Midwives.

this has begun to yield good fruits. The journey is going on fine and things are in good position.

let me see those interested
Travel / Re: 8 Things You Need To Know About New Zealand by anthney87: 11:41am On Jun 07, 2019
davodyguy:

Guy at one point you're in Australia and this time your post suggests Nigeria. Where exactly are you?

thought I was imagining things o.
Travel / Re: Nigerian Nurses And Midwives With The Dream Of Working Abroad Let's Meet Here. by anthney87: 2:08pm On Jun 06, 2019
this is the message I got. I still need explanation on it please.

Travel / Re: Nigerian Nurses And Midwives With The Dream Of Working Abroad Let's Meet Here. by anthney87: 2:06pm On Jun 06, 2019
Austinjeffy:
Please what of other profession like chemist? Any link on how to apply?

Hello house,
This post is about Nigerian Midwives who wish to apply to and work as a Registered midwife in New Zealand.
It is strictly for holders of Basic Midwifery certificate. That is, you studied Midwifery for 3yeara and got registered and licensed by the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria.
You must have worked for at least 3 years.
New Zealand offers good opportunuties for foreign midwives. A newly employed midwife in New Zealand earns 47000 New Zealand dollar per year. That's about 11,600,000 naira.
I will give a step by step procedure
1. Complete a three years Basic Midwifery study and get registered and licensed by the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria.
2. Get a valid (not expired) international passport ready. This cost around 25,000 naira from any immigration office near you.
2. At this point I advise you open a dollar account in any Nigerian bank so you can easily pay for your application and registration fee to New Zealand Midwifery Council. Don't panic. Its not difficult to open. Just go to aboki buy US$10 with 3500 naira. Go with your intl passport, electricity bill, 2 passport photographs to FCMB bank and they will do it for you. When you are ready to apply to New Zealand Midwifery Council, you must buy dollar from aboki and pay into this account to cover the amount you want to pay to New Zealand Midwifery Council. You need this because you can't pay to New Zealand Midwifery Council with your naira atm card.
3. Log in to
www.midwiferycouncil.health.nz/midwives/becoming-registered-practise/internationally-qualified-midwives-application-guidelines to study the guidelines.
4. With your valid valid license and intl passport ready and your dollar account funded with at least US$200, you Log in to www.midwiferycouncil.health.nz and create an account in their website. You will be given a username and password which you will need to Log in anytime. Click on 'Apply' and select 'Oversea' and fill the form.
Select 'Assessment fee'. This is because your documents will be assessed first before proper registration. Assessment fee is 250 New Zealand dollar, about 62,000 naira.
On payment option, select credit card and fill in the details on your dollar account atm card.
If they confirm your credentials to be true, they will give you decision letter to pay for your registration and license. This cost 750 New Zealand dollar, about 186,000 naira.
5. After filling the form online, you will be asked to print out two forms. You will take one to Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria to fill and send directly to New Zealand Midwifery Council.
6. You will send the following documents by post to:
New Zealand Midwifery Council,
Level 5,
22 Willeston Street,
Wellington Central,
Wellington 6011,
New Zealand.
- A photocopy of the data page of your intl passport
- Photocopy of your RM Notification of Registration
- Certificate of Good Standing. This with be sent by Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria directly to New Zealand Midwifery Council. NMCN charges around 10,000 naira for this.
7. Your CV signed and dated. It must also state names, full addresses of all health facilities/clinics/hospitals you have worked, your position, ward and explain the functions of that ward/unit.
8. Meet the Principal of your school of Midwifery and ask them to send your transcripts to:
New Zealand Midwifery Council
Tell your Principal to add that your studies were conducted and you were examined in English language. This is very important. If this is not stated, you will be required to sit and take IELTS test.
9. Get a reference letter from one of your former or current employer stating your Midwifery ability and conduct.
Another reference letter can come from a person of high standing but not related to you. You will add it in the documents you will send to New Zealand Midwifery Council.
10. Get a medical certificate of physical and mental fitness from a government hospital.
11. Fill the Self Assessment Against Competencies form. This is the second form you printed from New Zealand Midwifery Council website. You are required to have conducted at least 30 deliveries by yourself, 20 as assistants and 50 as observer. You will answer some questions on antenatal, postnatal, episiotomy, deliveries, medical surgical nursing, etc.
12. Photocopy of your WAEC/NECO. Ask your school to give you a testimonial stating your academic background and conduct. Your secondary school must state that English was the medium of study and you were examined in English language. This is the condition New Zealand Midwifery Council accepts to exempt you from taking IELTS.
12. First School Leaving Certificate.
13. Completed and printed online application form from New Zealand Midwifery Council website.
Note: all Photocopies must be notarised by a solicitor. He must print his name, Complete address, phone number, rank/designation and state 'I certify this document a true copy of their originals' on each documents. If this is not done, it will be rejected. So get a lawyer do that.
Mail all documents to:
New Zealand Midwifery Council in the address stated above.
If you have further questions on registration and licensing, pls write to New Zealand Midwifery Council via info@midwiferycouncil.health.nz
After your qualification is assessed and New Zealand Midwifery Council informs you, the next step is to look for Midwives recruitment agency in New Zealand.
They will assist you get a job while you are still in Nigeria.
They will file application for your work permit, pay your visa fee, your flight ticket, receive you on arrival in New Zealand and arrange an accommodation for you. You will sign a contract to work for them for 2 or 3 years. This does not affect your salary oo.
If you are married, they can sponsor you, your husband and one child or you and two children without your husband.
If you have further questions on Sponsorship, pls write:
info@accent.net.nz
Or
enquiries@tonix.co.nz
Or
info@medacs.co.nz
Thanks. My fingers ache.

copied.

My wife has done the pre registration process with new Zealand and she has been approved by o continue to full registration with the midwifery council. I see good things ahead.

Jobs/Vacancies / Re: Where Do Science Laboratory Technology Graduates Work? by anthney87: 7:47pm On May 05, 2019
[quote author=arinzos post=72412409][/quote]
Look closely at the STI policy of 2011 by the federal and tell me what it say.

Travel / Re: 8 Things You Need To Know About New Zealand by anthney87: 5:18pm On May 02, 2019
femijck:
Solin is right, no need for separate application. There should be a column for dependents in ur application form which will include partner and Children. Your partner and kids don’t qualify for the visa on their own right. Hence they have to depend on u as the principal applicant.

I haven’t seen the form but if there’s no column for dependents in the form, then it will have to be another “partner of a student visa form” or something similar which you will have to fill and submit with yours. That partnership form will definitely come with column for “dependents child(ren).
FEMI. please I have sent you a PM more than trice. please get to me via mail pls.
Travel / Re: 8 Things You Need To Know About New Zealand by anthney87: 10:13am On Apr 15, 2019
femijck:
yes that’s correct, I have a Nigerian friend who had been offered Nursing without Ielts. But for M.sc, it may be different. But I can confirm from someone later.

I will advise you check with the school you’re applying to.

Example of this is the requirement for Otago University. Input your country and the requirements comes up.

Check this link below
https://www.otago.ac.nz/future-students/otago661287.html
please can you link me up with the friend so I know how he/she went about it?
Travel / Re: Nigerian Nurses And Midwives With The Dream Of Working Abroad Let's Meet Here. by anthney87: 9:22pm On Mar 16, 2019
BarristerAlarig:



Oga try Hungary. I am doing the same thing. Mechanical Engineering to Nursing.
I will like to get the information better. how does it work? how many years? more info please.
Investment Ads / Re: Business Plan for loans and grants by anthney87: 1:46pm On Mar 13, 2019
damiafolabi9:
happy new month
Na free?
Travel / Re: 8 Things You Need To Know About New Zealand by anthney87: 3:21am On Mar 07, 2019
please FEMI. I need your assistance. I will be making a payment to the midwifery council of new Zealand. I am so confused about everything. I need you to help me out please.
1. I need confirmation on the address
2. the account to pay to too and how to make payment via international money transfer.

westpac bank, Po box 1298, Wellington. ph 0800400600
act 030502 039940200. act name. Midwifery council of NZ. swift code: WPACNZ2W

the above address is the payment address. please help me confirm that acct and address biko. Na help I need
Travel / Re: Nigerian Nurses And Midwives With The Dream Of Working Abroad Let's Meet Here. by anthney87: 12:21pm On Mar 01, 2019
Please how do I get to a notary public, solicitor or a justice of the peace that can authenticate or certify a document as the true copy?

I no even know these people. please I am in delta state. how do I get such people here?
Travel / Re: 8 Things You Need To Know About New Zealand by anthney87: 9:09pm On Feb 27, 2019
davodyguy:
Have you tried?
I'm doing $1000 USD payment too to Auckland via Sterling master card
did the payment go through? please let me know ASAP
Travel / Re: Nigerian Nurses And Midwives With The Dream Of Working Abroad Let's Meet Here. by anthney87: 1:25am On Feb 27, 2019
please anyone knows how to go about making application payment on new Zealand? I heard naira MasterCard don't won't. any helps as to this regard?
Travel / Re: 8 Things You Need To Know About New Zealand by anthney87: 1:23am On Feb 27, 2019
PLEASE FEMI. I will like to make a payment on new Zealand midwifery site but from what I gathered I can't pay with my naira MasterCard here in Nigeria. please how do I go about making the application payment?

this thread needs not die o. please you guys should keep it updated o
Travel / Re: 8 Things You Need To Know About New Zealand by anthney87: 4:43pm On Feb 17, 2019
this page seems so full of recent. I will say new Zealand is a better option aside US, CANADA AUSTRALIA N UK. my only problem with the country is that it is tooooo far.

please do they have permanent residency program like Canada? I mean the express entry type.
Travel / Re: 8 Things You Need To Know About New Zealand by anthney87: 8:37pm On Feb 05, 2019
solin:
Hi,

Kindly proceed with the application procedure. It's a good step in the right direction. This is a sure path way to enter NZ. Once her application is granted.

You would also get job easily.

My fear is if they will accept our midwifery degree over there.

my wife did 3 years basic midwifery and I don't know if they will accept it as equivalent to their midwifery over there. i ha e not seen any Nigerian to ask very well that did midwifery here and go accepted over there. so the reason I need help a d guidance
Travel / Re: 8 Things You Need To Know About New Zealand by anthney87: 12:04am On Feb 02, 2019
Good day all.

Respect to FEMI & SOLIN

PLEASE I want to pour out my own case. I am a B. Sc graduate of Biomedical technology. My wife is a Registered Midwife and just graduated too as a nurse last Dec here.
Now I have been chatting with Christine from the midwifery council of new Zealand and she said I have to follow the process of registering as a midwife in new Zealand. An initial payment of $250NZD to b paid and then if they consider her transcript okay(she did 3yrs midwifery training) with NZ she will be told to continue her application with a full payment of $750NZD. Below is the general information for international Midwife

https://www.midwiferycouncil.health.nz/midwives/becoming-registered-practise/general-information-internationally-qualified-midwives

and below is the guidelines

https://www.midwiferycouncil.health.nz/midwives/becoming-registered-practise/internationally-qualified-midwives-application-guidelines


Now please I want to know since if the council grant her to continue her application if getting a job will be easy since this will make her licence to practice as a midwife in NZ.

Again agencies told me they can only assist to sponsor us( she and 2persons- this is according to what someone said in a thread) only if the council approve her application. please guide and advice us since I am about to begin the application.

can I also be able to do a short course to perfect my skills if we are granted work permit? (my head don cold for book and since I graduate I no practice)

there are series of forms to sign and send by either a notary public, solicitor or a justice of the peace. who are they in Nigeria context. I de suspect lawyer ooo.


I need help o since I need to port out of this country o.

2 Likes 1 Share

Travel / Re: Nigerian Nurses And Midwives With The Dream Of Working Abroad Let's Meet Here. by anthney87: 9:49pm On Feb 01, 2019
anyone here that did post basic nursing?
Travel / Re: Nigerian Nurses And Midwives With The Dream Of Working Abroad Let's Meet Here. by anthney87: 12:10am On Jan 20, 2019
cynthiaezebaby:
iyaejima thanks for your update ,please can YOU inlight me more how I can work in Canada I lndia bsc but I'm in Nigeria whichprovice is that dont requires Nigeria ilets please
Hmn.

I weak.

all province in Canada requires IELTS.

I already see you are scared of IELTS like many of us. one because the fees is high and two because you might not get the required band needed. but if I may ask have you looked at other countries outside Canada and USA? have you looked at ireland, new Zealand( if going for midwifery don't need IELTS), Georgia, etc? UK is even easier too and you can be comfy here.

1 Like

Travel / Re: Nigerian Nurses And Midwives With The Dream Of Working Abroad Let's Meet Here. by anthney87: 1:09pm On Dec 28, 2018
barbiee:
the easiest way to pass the cbt test is to study past questions and answers that are specifically for the test this is because most of the questions were repeated . Royal marsden textbook is better used to prepare for osce not cbt.
please do reply me on mail.
Travel / Re: Nigerian Trained Midwives Working Abroad by anthney87: 9:07am On Dec 21, 2018
Please is there any Nigerian midwife here who relocated out of Nigeria as a midwife? Let's know how you did it because it basically seems relocation from Nigeria is only through the nursing career
Travel / Re: Nigerian Nurses And Midwives With The Dream Of Working Abroad Let's Meet Here. by anthney87: 8:10am On Dec 03, 2018
Sharingan:



you didn't state the requirements for registered nurses... Abi nah only midwifes fit apply
Nursing has their own websites and council different from that of midwifery.
Travel / Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant by anthney87: 12:55pm On Nov 29, 2018
Please o
Is there anyone here that is in Canada presently that can receive my friend over there?.

He already got his visa but since he doesn't have one to receive him over there he can't travel now. so please help a hustling bro out.

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (of 16 pages)

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 80
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.