There are approximately 2.7 million nurses in America.
The American Nurses Association (ANA) holds itself to be the representative of the 2.7 million nurses in America.
Less than 10% of all American nurses belong to the ANA.
The ANA has been around since 1902, 2002 being its 100th anniversary.
Most constituent member associations joined ANA in the early 1900's.
Membership has declined steadily and dramatically over the past years. In the 1950s around 55% of nurses were members. In 1974 25 to 30% were members. Today less than 10%.
Why is this? I used to be a member but dropped my membership because it was expensive and the only tangible thing I received from ANA was some sort of quarterly newsletter. I also watched as issues that negatively impacted nursing happened and continued to happen, where was the ANA? They were there but how effective have they been in standing up for nursing in ways that real nurses that work out in the patient care settings can relate to, in tangible ways?
One of the major issues today is that nursing is seen as a consumer of resources, costly hourly manual labor, not a contributor to generating revenue for the hospitals. The relationship between nursing care, patient outcomes, and financial performance needs to be documented. ANA states that they have been aware of this for 10 YEARS but have done nothing effective. Instead they have been advocating meaningless research that contributes little if anything to advance the profession and improve techniques and practices that nurses use that directly impact patient care outcomes. Nursing practice, that is actual hands-on procedures and tasks that nurses initiate and do has changed little based on my observations. If some of you can give examples I would greatly appreicate it.
The ANA has done some good things but nothing that gets the attention of the people in power that are running our healthcare system. The ANA has issued position statement after position statemet, what difference has this made? Hardly any.
Look at the state of nursing today. Look at the issues we are facing. Look at the reasons why nurses are leaving the profession and new people not coming in to nursing.
These issues have been brewing for quite some time and the ANA has failed to take effective, meaningful action. WHY IS THIS?
Do these people really represent us? They can't if no one is a member and votes. The medical profession has a powerful organization through the AMA, it is powerful because it has good membership and financial support.
We need our nurses to quit complaining and start doing something to change things or someone else will change it for us, it is already happening and they are not friends of nursing.
One thing we can do is join our national association and insist they take effective action that will produce results, not powerless, meaningless, position papers.