Health Secretary Tommy Thompson Tackles the Growing Shortage of Nurses

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THE NATION

Health Secretary Tackles the Growing Shortage of Nurses

Medicine: Thompson will seek extra education funds. He also touts new rapid response team.

By RANDY TRICK

TIMES STAFF WRITER

October 1 2002

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-na-nursing1oct01,0,2425197.story?coll=la%2Dnews%2Da%5Fsection

Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson said Monday that he is asking Congress for additional money for nursing education, and he pledged to put his energy behind funding that the American Nurses Assn. says it needs to inject the profession with new blood.

Thompson also announced the creation of the National Nurses Response Team, a nationwide mobilization similar in concept to the National Guard, to respond to bioterrorism or disease outbreaks.

"In the coming years, projections are that there simply won't be enough [nurses] to meet the vital health needs of our citizens," he said at a news conference. "If those numbers continue, we're going to be faced with a potentially dangerous shortage of nurses within the next two decades."

The response team program will compile a list of specially trained volunteer nurses willing to be deployed for two weeks to respond to a shortage of health-care professionals. The team could be used for mass vaccinations in the event of a bioterrorism attack, or to treat injuries at natural disasters.

Barbara A. Blakeney, president of the nurses association, which represents the nation's 2.6 million registered nurses, said that 900 nurses have volunteered, and that 2,000 are expected once word spreads. The volunteers will be trained, compensated for their time and will be able to resume their jobs once deployment ends.

But to be a success, more nurses are needed, Thompson said.

His pledge to help find more funding for nursing education comes as his department, in a report released in July, estimates that the number of nurses nationwide is lagging behind the need. By 2005, for example, California is predicted to have 162,645 registered nurses, but it will need 181,054--a shortage of 10%. By 2020, if the trend continues, California will need 263,673 registered nurses, but will have only 55% of the need filled--142,978 nurses.

One place the shortage is being felt is at UCLA Medical Center.

"The difficulty we're facing in California is not having enough nursing schools, the lack of four-year and two-year programs," said Heidi Crooks, its senior associate director of operations and patient care. "It's not a lack of interest."

Having more faculty and resources for training is dependent on the number of nurses attending postgraduate programs, which is directly tied to the number of students enrolling in nursing programs, Blakeney said.

Thompson and the nurses group have a California ally in Congress in their effort to increase the number of registered nurses. Rep. Lois Capps (D-Santa Barbara) played a key role in passing the Nursing Reinvestment Act, which President Bush signed in August.

The act, for which appropriations have not yet been provided, expands programs to help nursing students repay loans and creates additional scholarships. In exchange, graduates are required to work in nursing for four years. It also provides loan repayment for nurses with advance degrees who agree to teach in nursing schools.

Blakeney and Thompson said Monday that funding the act, which carries a $250-million price tag, is key to recruiting and retaining nursing students, and therefore is critical to the nation's health.

Thompson also asked Congress to increase funding for nursing education from $93 million to $100 million for the coming fiscal year.

For the first time in seven years, college nursing programs have seen enrollment increase, said Kathleen Ann Long, president of the American Assn. of Colleges of Nursing and dean of the University of Florida's College of Nursing.

"There has been lots of publicity given to the nursing shortage, and employing agencies are letting students know there is more interest and a better working environment," she said.

Specializes in ICU, nutrition.

All this money to educate new nurses, but there is no one to educate them.

I graduated from nursing school almost a year ago. Most of my teachers informed me that I'd be making more than what they make in less than five years. With the exception of the full professors at my school, the nursing instructors ALL worked PRN at hospitals in the area. They were working nights, weekends, and summers. I realize they needed to keep up their skills so they could teach effectively, but working every weekend or every other weekend doesn't seem like just keeping up skills. The only ones who didn't work part-time jobs in addition to teaching were the ones who didn't need the money (they had highly paid husbands).

I would love to teach someday, but I just can't see doing it for what I make now. I mean, when you work, you want to advance, make more money over the years, save for your retirement. How can you do that if you don't even get paid enough at a FULL-TIME job to keep your head above water?

Besides, right now, the problem is not that there aren't enough nurses. The nurses are just not working, or they are working part-time/PRN because that's all they can handle!

With the population aging, there probably will be a true nursing shortage in the future. The hospitals, government and ANA (along with other professional organizations) need to work together to solve the retention problem NOW, so that nurses will stay in the profession AND attract new nurses. As new as I am, I try to do everything I can to encourage the new nurses coming behind me so they'll stay in nursing. We need them.

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