More British Columbians are getting connected to care. (flickr.com)

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Office of the Premier

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Premier.Media@gov.bc.ca

Ministry of Health

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250-952-1887

Backgrounders

Attracting more health-care professionals from the U.S.

As of February 2026, more than 500 U.S.-trained health professionals have accepted job offers within B.C.’s public health-care system.

These doctors, nurses, nurse practitioners and allied health professionals are joining hospitals and clinics throughout the province, including:

  • 110 in Fraser Health
  • 88 in Interior Health
  • 141 in Island Health
  • 30 in Northern Health
  • 61 in Vancouver Coastal Health
  • 2 in First Nations Health Authority
  • 39 in the Provincial Health Services Authority
  • 33 in Providence Health Care

Examples of communities where they have been hired are Abbotsford, Burnaby, Surrey, Mission, Fort St. John, McBride, Prince George, Terrace, Prince Rupert, Quesnel, Cowichan, Nanaimo, Victoria, Port Alberni, Courtenay, Grand Forks, Kamloops, Oliver, Penticton, Vernon, Vancouver, Powell River and Richmond.

This progress update is part of the Province's "Team BC" approach in which health authorities, regulatory colleges, local governments and communities work together to recruit more health-care professionals from the U.S.

British Columbia is an attractive destination for U.S. health-care professionals. In addition to an evidence-based approach to public health, support for reproductive rights, and a strong public health-care system, the province also boasts a high standard of living, with free public health care and K-12 education, subsidized and licensed child care, top-ranking universities and diverse, safe communities.

Training, recruiting more health-care professionals for B.C.

Through B.C.’s Health Human Resources Strategy, government is training, recruiting and retaining more health-care professionals.

Government is fast-tracking credential recognition so internationally trained health professionals can join B.C.’s health-care system quicker. More than 1,200 internationally trained doctors were licensed to practise here in 2025. Many of them were helped by streamlined licensing processes for U.S.-trained and certified physicians and a Practice Ready Assessment B.C. program that now offers 96 seats annually, triple the capacity of a few years ago. More than 3,400 internationally educated nurses have received full or provisional registration since January 2023 to January 2026.

As well, more training seats have been added in B.C.’s post-secondary institutions, so people can get the education they need closer to home. This includes:

  • adding a total of 88 undergraduate medical education seats, 40 at the University of British Columbia and 48 at the new medical school at Simon Fraser University between 2023 and 2026
  • adding 160 postgraduate residency positions in family medicine, enhanced skills and priority Royal College specialties between 2022 and 2028 
  • investing in more than 450 permanent and more than 250 one-time seats for allied health occupations since 2017
  • adding more than 770 new training seats for midwives, registered nurses, psychiatric nurses, practical nurses and nurse practitioners since 2019

This is all part of the Province’s efforts to strengthen B.C.’s public health-care system, so people get the health services they need when they need it and closer to home.