How Thousands Of Nurses Got Licensed With Fake Degrees

Australia News News

How Thousands Of Nurses Got Licensed With Fake Degrees
Australia Latest News,Australia Headlines
  • 📰 Forbes
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 80 sec. here
  • 3 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 35%
  • Publisher: 53%

There’s an old, but now fast growing degree mill industry doing an estimated $7 billion a year worldwide in fraudulent diplomas and transcripts. Read more:

, nearly a fourth of workers admitted to having fibbed on a resume about a college degree or credential), while ChatGPT has heightened concerns about how easy it is—and how much easier it might become—to cheat one’s way to a legitimate degree.

While no one can really know the size of the market, Ezell estimates that phony degree mills now do $7 billion a year in sales worldwide, with much of that market in the United States and the Middle East, particularly the Gulf region. “We work in higher education where degrees matter a lot, and you need not just one, but multiple degrees to get a full-time job now,” Eaton says. “When we found out anecdotally that there was no systematic practice for hiring managers to check the credentials of applicants, we were floored.”

Ezell’s FBI Dipscam team , investigated around 80 suspected diploma mills, dismantled more than 40 of them and obtained 21 convictions. The brazenness of the business always impressed him. His first investigation, in 1980, was of Southeastern University of Greenville, S.C., a degree mill run out of a tiny two-bedroom house.

Axact, which has always insisted it’s a legitimate business, did not reply to requests for comment. On its corporate website, it describes itself as one of the world’s leading information technology companies with 45,000 employees and associates, and says that it has moved most of its operations out of Pakistan—though it still lists an Islamabad address.

According to an FBI agent’s affidavit and other documents filed in federal court in Maryland, the nursing degree investigation began back in 2019 with a tip to the FBI: two men were creating phony transcripts and nursing certificates from a Northern Virginia for-profit nursing school—a school Virginia shut down in mid-2013 for multiple violations.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

Forbes /  🏆 394. in US

Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Alabama State Nurses Association requests funding for retention, recruitment of nursesAlabama State Nurses Association requests funding for retention, recruitment of nursesBeing undervalued and underpaid is driving nurses out of the profession, but the Alabama State Nurses Association is calling on lawmakers who control ARPA funds for help.
Read more »

How Thousands Of Nurses Got Licensed With Fake DegreesHow Thousands Of Nurses Got Licensed With Fake DegreesThere’s an old, but now fast growing degree mill industry doing an estimated $7 billion a year worldwide in fraudulent diplomas and transcripts.
Read more »

How Thousands Of Nurses Got Licensed With Fake DegreesHow Thousands Of Nurses Got Licensed With Fake DegreesThere’s an old, but now fast growing degree mill industry doing an estimated $7 billion a year worldwide in fraudulent diplomas and transcripts.
Read more »

Nurses in England to suspend 48-hour strikeNurses in England to suspend 48-hour strikeStrike action planned for next week is paused as the Royal College of Nursing holds 'intensive talks' with government.
Read more »

Survey: America's nurses are stressed and frustratedSurvey: America's nurses are stressed and frustratedThe COVID-19 pandemic has put a lot of pressure on those in the health care industry, especially nurses. The American Nurses Foundation surveyed more than 12,000 nurses and found at least 60% have been stressed or frustrated on the job in the last 14 da...
Read more »

Government recommends 3.5% pay rise for nurses and other workersGovernment recommends 3.5% pay rise for nurses and other workersNurses, teachers and police officers would get below inflation rises, under government proposals.
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-02-28 22:32:53