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From 1976 to 1991, federal immigration laws barred foreign-born physicians from obtaining temporary working ("H-1B") status in order to perform direct patient care. A physician in H-1B status was permitted only to teach or conduct research in the U.S. for a public or nonprofit private educational or research institution or agency.
However, in 1991, Congress amended our laws to allow foreign-born physicians to qualify for temporary visas to enter the U.S. in order to qualify for medical residencies and fellowships and to perform patient care.
Physicians who are searching for job opportunities may do so online by clicking
Prior to its effective date of the 1990 law, the Senate passed an amendment to the law which reimposed the bar. However, the House of Representatives, heeding the pleas of small town and rural hospitals urgently in need of physicians, refused to go along with the Senate. Instead, an amended law was passed which allowed certain foreign-born physicians to obtain H-1B status in order to render patient care.
This compromise legislation, which was contained within the Miscellaneous Technical Immigration and Naturalization Amendments of 1991 (MTINA), allows physicians to obtain H-1B status by the following two methods:
Graduates of Canadian medical schools are in a favored position as compared with most IMGs.
First, they are not considered to be IMGs since the U.S. Department of Education through the Licensing Commission on Medical Education (LCME) has accredited all U.S. and Canadian medical schools. This distinction is important since, in most cases, it exempts Canadians from having to complete residencies in the U.S., from obtaining exchange visitor status, and from the two-year foreign residency requirement.
Second, in over 40 U.S. states, Canadian-licensed physicians are exempted from having to take U.S. examinations in order to obtain medical licenses. These states consider the Licentiate Medical Certificate of Canada (LMCC) examination to be equivalent to the FLEX.
Since most Canadian-trained physicians may obtain state medical licenses in the U.S. without passing a U.S. examination, and because the FLEX was primarily offered at test sites in the U.S., most Canadian physicians have not taken the FLEX, the NBME or the USMLE. This is a major obstacle in obtaining H-1B status for Canadian physicians. Many rightfully object to having to interrupt their practices to take a licensing examination when they are already licensed in the state of intended employment.
HHS has refused to designate any foreign medical examinations, including the LMCC, as equivalent to the FLEX. This is unfortunate since it places the federal government at loggerheads with over 80% of the state licensing boards which recognize the LMCC as equivalent to the FLEX and prevents many qualified Canadian physicians from obtaining temporary working status in the U.S. Ironically, immigration laws permit these same Canadian physicians to secure permanent residence in the U.S. without the necessity of passing the FLEX or an equivalent examination.
STEP ONE: THE PREVAILING WAGE DETERMINATION: U.S. immigration laws require that all H-1B physicians be paid the prevailing wage for their occupation in the geographic area where they will be employed or the actual wage being paid by the employer to other similarly employed physicians, whichever is higher. Severe penalties may be imposed on any employer who violates this requirement. The safest, though not the only, way to establish the prevailing wage is to obtain a letter from the State Workforce Agency (SWA) in the state of intended employment.
STEP TWO: THE LABOR CONDITION APPLICATION: Once an employer has obtained a prevailing wage determination, he may proceed to submit a labor condition application (LCA) to the U.S. Labor Department. In addition to the wage requirement, the LCA requires that an employer attest that:
STEP THREE: THE H-1B PETITION: Once an LCA is approved, the employer may submit an H-1B petition to INS. The employer must establish that both the offer of employment and the qualifications of the physician meet the standards of the immigration law. The employer must demonstrate its ability to pay the appropriate wage. Although the law is not totally clear in this area, in a number of cases, INS has allowed a hospital which does not actually employ a physician, but which guarantees his salary, to act as a petitioner. Documents demonstrating the physician's education, licenses, and compliance with the English and the medical examination requirements of the law and the regulations must accompany the petition.
The physician may not commence employment in the U.S. until the petition is approved and he has either changed his status to H-1B or has obtained an H-1B visa and entered the U.S. Simultaneously, the physician's spouse and unmarried children under 21 years of age may be granted H-4 visas/status. Although H-4 status permits one to remain in the U.S. with the H-1B physician, and to attend school, it does not permit the acceptance of employment. The initial duration of an H-1B petition is three years, with one additional three year extension of stay possible. Generally, after six years have elapsed, the physician must either have achieved permanent residence status or it is time for him to depart the U.S.
An employer may obtain permanent residence for a foreign-born physician utilizing the following three step process:
Although this procedure varies somewhat from state to state, an employer is typically required to place a job advertisement for a physician in an appropriate national journal. The ad must describe both the employment offered in terms of the job duties and the salary (The salary offered may not be less than the prevailing wage.) and the qualifications required to perform the job. The name of the employer need not be mentioned in the ad.
After reviewing the resumes received and interviewing any applicants who profess to be qualified for the position, the employer must demonstrate to the Labor Department that there are no U.S. physicians ready, able and qualified to perform the job.
In contrast to the requirements for obtaining H-1B status, an employer need not require that an applicant for permanent residence have passed the FLEX, or even that he has obtained a medical license in the state of intended employment.
There is an exception to the labor certification requirement for physicians whose employment would be in the "national interest". Generally, physicians who intend to practice in medically underserved areas for a minimum of five years may petition the INS to bypass the labor certification requirement. Even physicians who are independent practitioners rather than "employees" are eligible to apply for national interest waivers. However, INS regulations restrict which physicians are eligible for national interests waivers, and how they qualify to do so.
STEP TWO: VISA PETITION Once the Labor Department has approved the alien labor certification, the employer must submit a petition to INS to classify the physician under the appropriate category for permanent residence. Most physicians qualify under the employment- based second category as professionals holding advanced degrees.
The employer must demonstrate that they have the financial ability to guarantee the physician's salary. They must also establish that the employment is full-time with no definite termination date. Documents evidencing the physician's education and prior experience must be attached to the petition.
STEP THREE: APPLICATION FOR PERMANENT RESIDENCE If the physician's priority date is "current" (There are numerical backlogs which govern the length of time that a physician with an approved visa petition must wait to file an application for a green card. However, presently, there is no backlog for physicians.), the physician and his family may apply for permanent residence either at the INS office having jurisdiction over his place of residence in the U.S. at the same time that the visa petition is submitted. Alternatively, once the visa petition is approved, they may apply for permanent residence at a U.S. Embassy or Consulate in the physician's home country. When the application is made to INS, it is known as an application for "adjustment of status." When it is made abroad, it is called an application for an "immigrant visa".
Simultaneously with the submission of the application for adjustment of status, INS offices permit applications for employment authorization and "advance parole" (which is a travel document) to be filed on behalf of the physician, his spouse and children.
All applicants for permanent residence must show that they are not "excludable" from the U.S. Grounds for excludability may include certain criminal convictions, immigration fraud, subversive activities and infection with certain dangerous contagious diseases.