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Immigration
By Stephanie Ford
Posted on August 29, 2025
With this massive increase has come a significant spike in the success of those workers transitioning from temporary resident status to permanent residence. Let’s take a look at how healthcare worker numbers have changed over time, and dig into why they have strong rates of attainment of permanent resident status.
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Canada’s aging population and increasing healthcare demands have created an urgent need for doctors, nurses, personal support workers, and other medical professionals. At the same time, many Canadian-trained healthcare workers are retiring, and rural areas face chronic shortages. To close the gap, immigration has become one of the most important sources of healthcare talent.
Over the past decade, foreign-born workers have stepped into critical roles across hospitals and long-term care facilities. In fact, immigrants are overrepresented in some healthcare occupations, particularly nursing aides, orderlies, and patient service associates. Without their contributions, Canada’s healthcare system would be under even greater strain.
The number of Temporary Foreign Workers (TFWs) in Canada’s healthcare sector grew from just 3,200 in 2000 to 57,500 in 2022 — a nearly 17-fold increase. Growth accelerated sharply during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the number of healthcare TFWs rising by 50% between 2019 and 2020 alone.
By 2022, TFWs made up:
In certain subsectors, like home health care services, their share was even higher at 7.9%.
Chart from StatsCan
The profile of foreign-born healthcare workers has changed dramatically since the early 2000s. The Philippines dominated in the early years, but since 2017, India has become the leading source country. By 2022, nearly 15,000 Indian healthcare workers were in Canada, making up one-third of all TFWs in ambulatory care.
Geographically, Ontario, Quebec, and British Columbia dominate. In 2022, 43% of healthcare TFWs were in Ontario, 26% in Quebec, and 13% in British Columbia, together accounting for more than four out of five healthcare TFWs.
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Broadly speaking, healthcare workers use six programs to come to Canada as a temporary resident:
Recall that the TFWP includes LMIA-supported temporary workers, while the IMPs are LMIA-exempt temporary work permits. The IMP program includes PGWP holders, and the PGWP, other section (where PGWP holders lay), is the program that provides the most work permits to healthcare workers in Canada by a long margin. In 2022, this program saw 42,000 work permits, with the next closest being 10,400 from the study permit holders without a work permit program. The remaining programs each contributed 2,100 or fewer work permits in 2022.
Perhaps the most striking finding is the success healthcare workers have had in transitioning to PR:
Within the first five years of working in Canada’s healthcare system, more than half of TFWs secure permanent residency (54.5% for the 2000–2004 cohort; 59.6% for the 2010–2014 cohort).
The data also shows that healthcare workers are not just using Canada as a stopover — many remain in the sector long after getting PR. One year after gaining PR, nearly two-thirds of healthcare TFWs were still working in the sector. For those with occupation-specific healthcare work permits, retention was even higher: at least 80% remained in healthcare after one year, and more than three-quarters were still in the field five years later.
Several forces have contributed to the steady increase of internationally trained professionals in healthcare:
More recently we’ve also seen improved credential recognition efforts. Although challenges remain, some provinces have simplified licensing processes for foreign-trained nurses and doctors, allowing them to enter the workforce more quickly. It will be interesting to see what impact this has on the number of immigrant healthcare workers in Canada – particularly nurses and doctors from the USA.
Coming to Canada as a temporary resident either to work in a healthcare role or study an in-demand healthcare-related field remains a strong strategy for gaining permanent residence in Canada.
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