Re: Addressing the Nursing Shortage
Good article (better than most on the subject), but it failed to mention the other half of the "double whammy" in nursing education -- there are
two basic problems with increasing the number of nursing students accepted; one is the lack of qualified faculty, but the second is a growing lack (sounds like an oxymoron!

) of clinical sites. It's not so much of a problem for basic med-surg clinicals (yet!), but, as more and more hospitals merge into "healthcare systems" and consolidate services to save money, there are more and more nursing programs competing for fewer and fewer specialty units for specialty clinicals -- peds, psych, OB, intensive care, etc.
This is already a big problem in most nursing schools -- at the last BSN program in which I taught, arranging the specialty clinicals each semester was a
nightmare, as we competed with another BSN program, two diploma programs, and six or seven ADN programs in our area for the same few units/sites, and many of the clinical opportunities ended up being of v. poor quality because of the available hours or sites. If, next month or next year, nursing programs were suddenly able to take twice as many students as they are currently because the faculty shortage was somehow ameliorated, the clinical site problem would remain and would only be worse.
Nursing News