Yes it is !
The Federal government is paying enough attention to the alleged "nursing shortage”; one does not exist! What they are doing is not helping nursing!
State and federal efforts are designed to help employers get additional nurses to staff their facilities without making the necessary changes to compensation and working conditions. The federal efforts to address the” nursing shortage" serve the employers to maintain the status quote.
Further loosening already lax immigration laws, providing loans for education and housing (at employer whims) do nothing positive for nurses currently working. How can dilution of the nursing labor supply create the demand necessary to motivate new potential nurses to enter practice or encourage currently licensed nurses to resume practice?
Creating conditions where an increased pool of nurses available to practice only serves to maintain the paltry compensation and heinous working conditions currently being suffered by nurses. Now, even with sufficient numbers of nurses licensed to practice and fully address the "shortage” nurses are choosing not to work.
This is attributable to numerous factors. Primarily, unreasonable working conditions and compensation far below the level acceptable in relation to the responsibility assumed for the functions entailed in nursing. Current market forces do not motivate nurses to engage in employment.
When market forces exist to entice currently licensed nurses - already in adequate supply- to resume practice and potential nurses to undergo the rigors of education necessary to become nurses; nurses will appear! Artificially altering the market forces in nursing as the federal and state government are doing will never address the reasons nurses leave or never begin practice.
Ever notice that there is no shortage of CEO's, lawyers, doctors, or any other adequately compensated "professionals?” Market forces in our system ensure that there are sufficient numbers of these people. The compensation for these functions is adequate to entice potential people to undergo education and work in them.
Nursing services, the stepchild and backbone of health care, will continue to be a factor in the health care paradigm. A true market based solution is the only cure for the "nursing shortage."
All attempts to artificially alter the supply of nurses practicing other than increased compensation and more tolerable working conditions are a sure recipe for failure.
I am continually amused by nursing consortiums where nurses gather to address the fictitious shortage. They simply cannot see the clear and simple solution staring them in the face. Higher pay and better working environments are the only real answers. Could maintaining low compensation for nurses and ensuring a high volume of licensed people possibly be considered a worthy goal of any organization with the intent of supporting nurses?
Employers will need to accept that market based solutions are the only real solution to these issues. Pay considerably more and ensure tolerable working conditions.
Nursing News