Company overview

Learn more about how our vast array of solutions and best-in-class technologies are powerfully serving the healthcare workforce. 

Our brands

They say you can’t choose your family – but we did. We think you will, too. Our family of companies can tackle problems of any size, big or small. 

Our role in healthcare

Learn more about how we use our unrivaled staffing experience, best-in-class technology, and strategic consultation to help your organization succeed.

Executive leadership

Meet our team of executive leaders who are guiding our efforts to make life better for providers, patients, and healthcare organizations. 

Core values

See how our core values guide all our business decisions and drive us to find new ways to make life better for those we serve in the healthcare industry.

Community impact

Learn more about how we give back to communities both near and far through fundraisers, team activities, medical missions, and more. 

Solutions overview

See how we’re delivering customized workforce solutions that are doing right by our healthcare partners and improving how healthcare is done. 

Technology

Check out our suite of high-tech solutions that perfectly complement our high-touch approach to a future-ready workforce. 

Strategic consultation

We’re experts in exactly one healthcare staffing solution: yours. Partner with our experts to build a workforce strategy tailored specifically to you. 

Physicians

See how our experts draw from the industry’s largest locums database to deliver customized solutions such as locum tenens, permanent placement, and telehealth.

Advanced practice

Get insights into how our team of APP-specific experts use in-house credentialing and licensing to deliver the right candidate to your facility.

Allied health

Learn more about the process we use to connect your organization with qualified therapists, technicians, technologists, assistants, and more.

Nurses

Find out what makes our nurse staffing truly stand out in the industry, and how we’re constantly looking for new ways to make the process smoother.

Telehealth

Tap into the nation’s largest network and deepest specialty bench of multi-state license providers to keep your virtual care strategies on track.

Blog

Visit our blog to get workforce insights, catch the latest company updates, and hear important stories from within the healthcare industry.

Resources

Get industry insights, workforce strategies, and more from our resource section. Each video, article, and tool has been created with your success in mind. 

Careers overview

Get the details on how a career at CHG fast-tracks your success and lets you play a role in helping 25 million patients receive care each year.

View jobs

Locations

Get all the details about our various locations nationwide. We have expanded our operations to better serve the needs of the healthcare community.

Benefits

Browse our benefit and wellness programs and learn how our team handpicks the best options to support you as a whole person.

Diversity, equity, and inclusion

Learn about the DEI goals we’re embracing to make our company¬–and healthcare industry at large–a better home for everyone.

Learning and development

See how our award-winning team of trainers can help you develop new skills and pursue the career path that makes you feel the most alive.

Employee stories

Check out stories from our people’s lives that highlight how CHG supports personal growth and helps you make a positive impact in the world.

Flexibility

Learn more about how our commitment to workplace flexibility puts you in the best position to be happy, comfortable, and effective.

Talent network

Visit our Talent network page to apply for a job, communicate with our talent acquisition team, or refer someone else for a job at CHG.

Recruiting process

Learn more about our hiring process and how we seek out the best opportunities for you to make an immediate impact.

5 things to know about recruiting foreign-born physicians

foreign-born physician consulting with colleages

Many healthcare facilities located in rural and health shortage areas face challenges recruiting physicians, especially in high-demand specialties. However, many physician recruiters have been successful hiring foreign-born physicians to fill open positions and bring much needed care to their communities. These physicians can be a great option for hard-to-fill openings, but it's important to understand the immigration and employment eligibility process in order to complete a successful hire. Here are five things every physician recruiter should know about recruiting foreign-born physicians.

1. Learn about J-1 visas, waivers, and work eligibility

The first step is to familiarize yourself with the terms commonly used when discussing hiring foreign-born physicians:

  • A J-1 visa is granted to foreign medical graduates (FMGs) who desire to pursue graduate medical training in the United States. Upon completion of their medical training, FMGs are expected to return to their home countries for two years before applying for residency and work in the United States.
  • A J-1 waiver removes the two-year home country obligation and allows a physician to apply for an immigration status that allows him or her to work lawfully in the United States. Healthcare facilities in designated shortage areas may sponsor candidates for a J-1 waiver to allow the physician to work in a lawful H-1B status. States are allotted up to 30 J-1 waivers annually, a majority of which are designated specifically for shortage areas.
  • An H-1B visa is a temporary employment-related visa granted for an initial stay of three years with a possibility of an extension of another three years (for a total of six years), during which time a physician can work toward full citizenship while lawfully employed.

2. Get informed about the process

Jennifer Semling is manager of talent acquisition for Altru Health System. Headquartered in Grand Forks, ND, Altru serves a region of approximately 225,000 people in North Dakota and Minnesota, many of whom live in shortage areas.

Semling stresses the importance of understanding the process and knowing the dynamics that shape your region or state’s demand on allotted J-1 visas.

Being really informed is the first step,” says Semling. “Make sure you understand the process and understand the restrictions around recruiting somebody who requires a J-1 waiver. Having a good understanding of what is available to you as far as visas helps the candidate know that you know what you’re doing. Importantly, it helps you not to overpromise and under-deliver. At some point, a J-1 candidate doesn’t have time to interview at a place only to find out they won’t even qualify for a visa.”

Semling further advises to have healthcare immigration legal expertise available to you, and to remain in close contact with your state’s Department of Health. This body oversees the first steps of the J-1 process and can help you understand what is available to you in your area.

3. Timing and planning is key

Jennifer Lynch is a regional director of provider recruitment for LifePoint Health. LifePoint owns and operates hospitals and healthcare facilities in 88 markets nationwide, predominantly in non-urban areas. Lynch recruits for nine facilities in towns where the population ranges from 8,000 to 100,000 people.

Lynch cites timing, planning and preparedness as the most important factors for a successful J-1 hire.

“You have to know there’s a very strict timeline involved,” says Lynch. “Typically, the window for accepting J-1 waiver applications opens on October 1. In order to meet that timeline, all contracting must be complete and must account for time for an immigration attorney to review the contract. The facility has some legwork to do, the candidate has some legwork to do, and you must account for ample time.”

Being prepared for the October 1 window is critical. While some states may take months for all slots to be filled, others are gone within hours.

For example, Texas, one of four states in her territory, is notoriously difficult according to Lynch. “If you don’t have every duck in a row and a very certain sort of duck, you're not going to get it,” she says.

4. Document your steps

Jennifer Waters-Plemon, physician and APC recruiter for Marshfield Clinic Health System in Marshfield, WI, underscores the importance of keeping appropriate documentation to support a J-1 hire.

In order to justify a non-U.S. citizen hire, several criteria must be met, including at least six months of advertising and recruiting for the position, records of the people you’ve recruited and proof that the need cannot be met with a U.S. candidate.

“J-1 hires have helped our organization a lot in filling a lot of critical needs for which we are unable to get U.S. citizens to apply. But that's a key part of the J-1 process — you cannot hire a J-1 if you have U.S. citizens that apply and are qualified for the position,” says Waters-Plemon. “So it’s important to document your efforts. In addition to advertising the position, we collect written letters of recommendation and complete a community assessment that documents all the reasons why a particular candidate is important to our community and to our clinic.”

5. Hire with a long-term mindset

Last, but not least, all three experts urge recruiters and physicians to look beyond the initial three-year commitment and seek for a long-term fit.

“If you’re able to give candidates time and information, they can really focus on whether this opportunity and community are the right fit for them,” Semling says. “You don’t want to lose sight of the importance of finding that long-term match.”

“As a recruiter, one of the things I enjoy most is having conversations with folks and learning about how things are done in other countries and cultures,” Lynch says. “Don’t ever get a CV and deny them because they’re foreign-born or foreign-trained. Take the opportunity to have a conversation with that person because they may be exactly the fit you’re looking for.”

“Approximately 70 percent of our J-1 hires stay on at our organization longer than the three-year commitment, so to me that speaks highly,” Waters-Plemon says. “We would be foolish not to be open to J-1 candidates. There are a lot of foreign-born medical graduates, and if we don’t have U.S. citizens applying for those subspecialties, we’re basically eliminating physicians just based on immigration — not skills or training. It’s kind of a no-brainer.”

This article first appeared on WeatherbyHealthcare.com. Weatherby is a division of CHG Healthcare. For help finding the physicians and advanced practice providers you need to staff your healthcare facilities, give us a call at 866.588.5996 or email ecs.contact@chghealthcare.com.

About the author

Allison Riley

Allison Riley is a public relations professional with more than 10 years experience in healthcare and corporate communications. She lives in New York City with her better half and two wonderful daughters. She and her girls are currently contending for world’s slowest recorded stair climb to a fifth-floor apartment, and she enjoys writing so she can just finish her sentence already.

See all articles from this author

Post Archives

Thanks. We received your message and one of our strategic advisors will contact you shortly.