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The Nursing Shortage


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Despite the shortage, nursing schools still have to turn applicants away due to the shortage of nursing faculty. In an American Association of Colleges of Nursing survey, 38.8% of responding schools cited faculty shortages as a reason for rejecting qualified applicants from entry-level baccalaureate programs.

Another study released by the Southern Regional Board of Education documents an average 12% shortfall of nursing educators – higher, even, than the average nursing vacancy rate. This is particularly difficult problem for nursing schools, because a low faculty/student ratio is necessary to ensure proper education in the field.

The shortage is also due to the increasing number of career options for women and job options for nurses. In the days of Florence Nightingale, nursing was one of the few careers for women. Although nursing is still widely regarded as a female-only profession (only 5.4% of RNs in 2000 were male), the multitude of options available to women has diminished its draw.

Furthermore, the problems with HMOs and the demands for better health care have led to more private health care organizations, which remove another chunk of the available RN workforce.

Nursing administrators are not sitting idly by, however. A number of plans to address the shortage on a national level are in the works. These include:

Call to the Profession: a group of top leaders working together to address the causes and effects of the shortage.
www.ana.org
TriCouncil for Nursing: an alliance of four nursing organizations working together to address the shortage.
www.aacn.nche.edu/Publications/positions/tricshortage.htm
Nurse Reinvestment Act: signed by the President on August 1, 2002, this law provides for scholarship money for new students, a Faculty Loan Cancellation Program to remove financial barriers to faculty careers, funding for better practices, and public service announcements to champion nursing careers.
www.aacn.nche.edu/Media/shortageresource.htm#legislations
Nurses for A Healthier Tomorrow: a coalition of 40 organizations working together to raise interest in nursing among middle and high school students

States are taking their own initiatives as well. In Massachusetts, legislators are pushing for the Clara Barton Act, which would provide $25,000 starting bonuses over several years to new nurses in the top 15% of their classes. In Texas, the Nurse Shortage Reduction act has been introduced, which would double nursing school capacity during the next five years in a state where thousands of qualified applicants are being turned away.

In addition, the current state of the economy means that more students will be thinking creatively about career opportunities, and the initiatives falling into place will bring up nursing in their minds as a viable option. Moreover, the supply of nurses has actually increased during the past four years, just at a slower rate than in the past. In operating rooms, the shortage is almost nonexistent. The number of male nurses was only 5.4% in 2000, but that was up from 4.9% in 1996 – a 10% increase over four years. This changing perception of the nursing profession, coupled with federal and state initiatives establishes that in the years to come the rewarding profession of nursing will only continue to prosper.

To learn more about the Nursing Shortage, visit NurseWeek.com.

* NCLEX. is a registered trademark of the National Council of State Boards of Nursing, Inc.

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