No Nursing Shortage At The Present Time

Despite rampant claims of a critical nursing shortage, many cities and states in the US are actually suffering from the opposite problem: a surplus of nurses. The intended purpose of this article is to challenge the widespread belief that a current nursing shortage exists. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

I am assured that some of you are reading this and saying to yourselves, "Duh! This topic is old hat. We already know there's a glut of nurses in many parts of the country, so why are you writing about this?"

Here is my reason for writing about the current surplus of nurses in local employment markets. I entered the term 'nursing shortage' into a popular search engine and yielded nearly 720,000 results. Afterward, I searched for the phrase 'no nursing shortage' using the same search engine and received about 59,000 results. Since the loud warnings of a dire nursing shortage are being hollered everywhere, I am going to do my part and shout some information that contradicts these claims.

Hospitals began experiencing a shortage of nurses in 1998, according to the American Hospital Association in 2002 (Ostrow, 2012). Colleges and universities aggressively responded to this shortage by expanding their existing nursing programs and/or starting new schools of nursing. Johnson & Johnson started an ad campaign to entice more people into the profession. Healthcare facilities responded to the shortage by offering more perks such as tuition reimbursement and scholarships to current employees.

Well, those efforts to increase the total number of nurses in the US have been wildly successful. The number of full-time nurses grew by about 386,000 from 2005 to 2010 and about a third of the growth occurred as unemployment rose to a high of 10 percent during that period, according to a report published in the New England Journal of Medicine (Ostrow, 2012). But still, the study raises an intriguing question: How did the nation go from a shortage to, if not a surplus, then at least an apparently adequate supply of nurses? (Rovner, 2011).

The federal government helped by increasing the funding for nursing programs to a whopping $240 million, up from $80 million in 2001. The proliferation of accelerated bachelor of science in nursing (BSN) degree programs and direct-entry master of science in nursing (MSN) degree programs also contributed to the rapid increase in the number of new nurses because students who hold non-nursing degrees can complete these training programs in 12 to 18 months.

The slumping economic situation in the US also contributed to the easing of the nursing shortage. Seasoned nurses are not retiring because many saw their retirement funds dwindle during the economic crisis of 2008. Other nurses have become breadwinners and accepted full-time positions once their spouses were laid off during the Great Recession. Some nurses are coming out of retirement and reactivating their nursing licenses. Moreover, masses of people lost health insurance benefits after becoming unemployed, which leads to reduced patient census in places that provide nursing care.

Thirty-six percent of nursing graduates in the class of 2011 had not secured positions as registered nurses (RNs) as of last fall, according to a survey conducted by the National Student Nurses' Association in September (Griswold, 2012). Of course, some states are afflicted with a worse glut of nurses than others. More than four out of ten (43 percent) of California nurses, who were newly licensed as registered nurses in the previous 18 months, say they could not find a job, according to a recent survey paid for by the California Institute for Nursing & Health Care (CVBT, 2012).

Experts predict that a nursing shortage will peak in the US in 2020. While these projections may turn out to be accurate, keep in mind that this country is continually producing record numbers of new nurses each year. Still, the nursing shortage of the late 1990s appears to have eased.

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Specializes in Cardiac Nursing.

i'm one of those extremely stale grads, circa 2008. i don't consider myself unemployable, just can't get an interview to sell myself. i've gone back to school to get that covetted bsn and try to keep up to date on ce's and go to local nursing association meetings in the areas of interest. networking has been a bust since everyone i've met work for one hospital system and can't seem to get you an in. i even met the asst nurse manager for my "dream" unit, she had me email me her resume to forward to the manager...nada. now i am applying out of my home state again in hopes that somewhere i can get something, even though i cannot really afford to relocate.

i do a lot of reading to keep myself up to date on things, but i'm beginning to not understand all what i'm reading and honestly don't know who to ask without sounding dumb or getting the "it will make more sense when you are working".

i also read on another forum that there are places that will hire new grads and welcome them, unfortunately some have stopped hiring non-local grads. they feel that hiring from outside the area hurts retention and will only hire those from the schools local to them since most out of town/state grads will return to their home state as soon as they get enough experience to do so.

Specializes in Hospice / Ambulatory Clinic.

If the patients are moving out into the community then the nurses will just have to follow them. All I have done since I graduated is community based healthcare : Home health / Ambulatory Care / Hospice because thats where the jobs are. Would I like to be elsewhere? Well sure but I'll adapt to where I'm wanted.

Specializes in Peds Medical Floor.

I am training for my first hospital job (finally!!) after a year and a half after graduating. I took care of a former nursing instructor last week. She was shocked when I told her it took me 9 months to get a LTC job and a year and a half to get into a hospital. I hope she tell the school that....the school just expanded it nursing department.

Specializes in "Wound care - geriatric care.
I am training for my first hospital job (finally!!) after a year and a half after graduating. I took care of a former nursing instructor last week. She was shocked when I told her it took me 9 months to get a LTC job and a year and a half to get into a hospital. I hope she tell the school that....the school just expanded it nursing department.

This is what really worries me. I see these wannabe nurses flocking to nursing programs ready to shell out big money and years of toiling in nursing school. All of this fueled by the propaganda such "nursing shortage" "recession proof profession" and little they know that once the money is paid, diplomas received most of them will not get jobs and are tossed to the wolves with no one to ask for help. I feel like the city or the consumers protection department should intervene and not let schools get away with false advertisement.

Just an example of how out of touch some academics are. Don't listen to their advice.

Specializes in Trauma.
i'm one of those extremely stale grads, circa 2008. i don't consider myself unemployable, just can't get an interview to sell myself. i've gone back to school to get that covetted bsn and try to keep up to date on ce's and go to local nursing association meetings in the areas of interest. networking has been a bust since everyone i've met work for one hospital system and can't seem to get you an in. i even met the asst nurse manager for my "dream" unit, she had me email me her resume to forward to the manager...nada. now i am applying out of my home state again in hopes that somewhere i can get something, even though i cannot really afford to relocate.

did i misunderstand your post or did you say you graduated nursing school in 2008, can't get a job and don't see that as a sign of not being employable?

I have the need to vent-

1. At age 56, I am a Baby Boomer. I do not consider this retirement age, old age or elderly!!!! unless one is very wealthy, like your CEO's but that is not me. I have a bankruptcy to pay off and 20 more years of mortage payments and ZERO for retirement except what ever social security is, which is not a kings ransom. So please stop posting that there is going to be this mass exodus of "the baby Boomers" like it is going to be the biggest anticipated funeral of all man kind- I am very offended!!!! I would also like to add- I am no one's Grandparent!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I totally resent the sentiment- "Get out. Should retire. It's my turn." Save those sentiments for your parents- who probably encourage such entitlement. They may appreciate them- I don't. It is rude, offensive and obnoxious- like passing gas in public., or the 5 year old brat I heard screaming in the waiting room today telling a stranger adult to "SHUT UP" and his young mother not correcting him- whoopie another generation of entitlement.

2. There are nurses( alot of nurses) out there who have been employed in the same job for years that do not realize how hard it is to find a job these days for the young nurse and the old. Forget educating the Doctors. We have to educate our own who are clueless.

Specializes in Hospice / Ambulatory Clinic.

No 56 isn't retirement age but baby boomers are a range from 45 to 66. Your firmly in the middle. I don't say it's wrong to state that this generation is gearing up to retire. Obviously the older members will retire first IF they can. But we're not kicking you out the door yet ;O unless you want us to. Though realistically some will retire; some will not. Some will cut back; some will not. Some will get sick and injured and have to leave nursing and some will not.

Though the real true statement is some of the workforce will leave when their financial situation allows them to do so.

If you could retire would you?

Specializes in ..
This is what really worries me. I see these wannabe nurses flocking to nursing programs ready to shell out big money and years of toiling in nursing school. All of this fueled by the propaganda such "nursing shortage" "recession proof profession" and little they know that once the money is paid, diplomas received most of them will not get jobs and are tossed to the wolves with no one to ask for help. I feel like the city or the consumers protection department should intervene and not let schools get away with false advertisement.
There was a recent suit filed by grads of several law schools; they claimed they were deceived and lured into attending law school and given false hope for employment. The suit was tossed. The law schools maintained the students should have been aware of their chances of finding employment, and should have researched the market prior to applying and plunking down all that money and wasting all that time. Sound familiar?
Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.
If you could retire would you?

I'm 56, too. And the answer in my case is **hellyeah**

Specializes in Hospice / Ambulatory Clinic.
I'm 56, too. And the answer in my case is **hellyeah**

Ok so when all the baby boomer nurses win the lottery there will be a shortage again. Problem solved. Lotto tickets for everyone.

Specializes in Hospice / Ambulatory Clinic.
There was a recent suit filed by grads of several law schools; they claimed they were deceived and lured into attending law school and given false hope for employment. The suit was tossed. The law schools maintained the students should have been aware of their chances of finding employment, and should have researched the market prior to applying and plunking down all that money and wasting all that time. Sound familiar?

Considering how expensive law school and supposedly how smart you are supposed to be to get in then I agree somewhat with the judge.

Disclosure: I was a law student in NZ and I dropped out as soon as I realized that I'd need to be in the top 25% of my class to be able to get any kind of a job as a lawyer. Luckily I was only OOP about $1500NZD. You can go direct entry into law school back home so I had only just finished high school but even I could see the writing on the wall.