This article discusses the nursing shortage over the decades and the role of healthcare corporations in undermining the profession and creating less access and poor quality of treatment to patients.
Updated:
Nursing shortage has reached critical levels. That alarming iconic statement is a sign of the times, and it is broadcast daily in the media. Of course, the crisis is blamed on the Coronavirus. Assuredly, everyone in healthcare at this moment in history, nurses specifically, is overwhelmed, overworked, overpowered, and overcome with exhaustion to the point of being totally over it. Yet this nursing crisis did not start with the first COVID case in the United States or even after the first 39 million patients diagnosed with COVID. It has been a slow, relentless, insidious scheme occurring over decades.
Do you remember the nursing shortage of the 1970’s? That’s when nurses first began to work 12 hour shifts. Was that because nurses were demanding 12 hour shifts? No, there were not enough nurses to staff three shifts. In addition, hospital administration was in favor for obvious reasons. Less staff meant less salaries and benefits, and therefore, more revenue.
About the same time period, hospital and healthcare organizations began to merge. Originally, the intention was to decrease costs and standardize care through electronic medical records, joint purchasing options, and more efficient coordination of patient care. Unfortunately, studies have shown that hospital mergers only increase costs. Huge healthcare conglomerates mean costly administrative bureaucracies, enormous marketing expenditures, and decreased competition. Decreased competition is the gold standard for business models today. When a hospital system controls the market, they can exercise their leverage to negotiate higher prices with insurance companies. As a result, Insurance companies raise rates to cover the hospital expenses, and the patient is the one who suffers due to inflated insurance premiums. Furthermore, there are fewer diverse employment opportunities for nurses and hospital consolidations slow wage growth.
How have hospital acquisitions affected nurses? Nursing satisfaction scores have decreased with hospital mergers. Nurses have more responsibility and less support staff. Not surprisingly, an increase in musculoskeletal injuries has also been reported. Twelve hour days that are consistently fourteen hour days lead to emotional fatigue and physical exhaustion. Turnover rates are high. Nurses leave, either for a change of venue in the clinical realm, which can be difficult since there is very little choice among the corporate monopolies, or sometimes to find a completely new profession. New people are hired and an already frustrated, overworked, mentally strained staff is expected to mentor new hires. It is a continuous vicious cycle. All of this results in mistrust of administrators and the organization as a whole. Obviously, this type of work environment is less than optimal.
Furthermore, multiple studies over the last two decades have demonstrated that nursing satisfaction scores demonstrate a positive correlation with patient outcomes. Aiken and associates demonstrated that hospitals with higher ratios of patients per nurse were more likely to increase the odds of nurses reporting poor quality of care and patients were less likely to rate them highly or recommend the hospital. Research studies by Perry and associates demonstrated similar results. Units with less than satisfied nurses have more medical errors, falls, nosocomial infections, and poorer patient outcomes.
Over the last 4 decades, nurses have been bombarded with overwhelming demands, increased liability, an upsurge in negative workplace experiences, even to the point of physical violence, increased work injuries, and less support and empathy from leadership. Policies and protocols dictate tedious documentation. Hospital policies, federal and state regulations, and joint commission requirements are lengthy and arduous. Provider organizations and private insurance have adversely impacted the delivery of nursing care. Who has time to care for patients when the list of duties and requirements grows exponentially? In truth, nursing care is no longer meeting the physical and emotional needs of the patient, instead we cater to the demands of an indifferent corporate system that monitors profit margins and struggles to constrain litigation. A prime example of corporate disregard for nurse demands is being expected to go to other units to work, units we have not been trained on, units that have certain responsibilities we cannot perform due to lack of training or certification. What does that mean? Another nurse has to help the nurse who has been pulled to the unit, performing various tasks such as administering chemotherapy, explaining orthopedic medical devices, or just helping her find the correct supplies. This situation only increases the workload for both nurses, which means increased anxiety and emotional stress. What is the likelihood that nurses will give a positive rating to those types of work environments? As previously stated, a dissatisfied nurse is a dissatisfied patient.
Another flagrant disregard for nurses is the lack of representation on hospital boards. There are 3.8 million registered nurses compared to approximately 1 million medical doctors in the United States, but what is the composition of the hospital board? It is very disappointing to discover that hospital boards are made up of doctors and business leaders. Nurses are front line caregivers and should be included in developing patient care policy. Nurses are essential to everyday patient care and they understand better than anyone the daily operation of a hospital, but there is an obvious lack of nurses on hospital boards across the country. In fact, there is a definite scarcity of nurses, pharmacists, respiratory therapists, and physical therapists, the staff that are the matrix of the hospital environment.
Surprisingly, the hospital workforce has grown by nearly 75% between 1990 and 2012, according to an article in the Harvard Business Review, but for every sixteen non-doctor workers, ten of those are management and administrative roles. At first glance, one would assume the remaining six are nurses, which is still a negative percentage, but the real facts are even worse. The remaining six are the entire clinical staff, including nurses, allied health professionals, medical assistants, and care coordinators. Is it safe to say there are too many captains and not enough crew? Sadly, nurses have been advocating for safe staffing guidelines for over 20 years without any meaningful change, but the non-clinical workforce has increased significantly. Not only do the executive positions multiply, but corporate salaries continue to skyrocket. Still hospitals choose to understaff frontline workers and demand unrealistic expectations at the expense of the staff and the patient.
Nursing is a call to care. It is a passionate commitment to care for those who are sick, injured, disabled, or dying, as well as offer support to their family members. Unfortunately, the healthcare model of today does not feel that same level of responsibility. The idea that caring for patients is a selfless, noble profession dictated by a higher calling no longer exists. Healthcare is defined by a business model, governed by corporate executives that have never even had an opportunity to see a patient much less observe the daily workings of a hospital.
Our healthcare system, in the name of progress, quality patient care, and strategic cost reduction, has exploited nurses and left patients without adequate resources to obtain satisfactory healthcare or even maintain a healthy lifestyle. Nurses are required to work long hours, they are expected to work in areas in which they are not adequately trained, and there is never enough staff to physically care for patients much less educate them regarding a diagnosis, prescribed medications, or discharge instructions. The end result is that patients suffer harm due to hospital medical errors, and patients are discharged without necessary education or supplies.
Changes are long overdue. Just as Nightingale commanded a new dialogue around nursing and patient care 150 years ago, today’s nurses must come to the forefront of designing safe patient care strategies. We must demand access to equitable healthcare for everyone, we must demand a seat at the table of corporate boardrooms, we must demand a safe supportive work environment for ourselves which ultimately delivers safe and supportive care for all patients. To achieve our goals, nurses must stand united as a powerful voice and advocate in our workplace, our schools, and our communities, and petition our state and federal legislatures to advance the cause of safety for nurses and patients. Time is of the essence.
References/Resources
Changes in quality of care after hospital mergers and acquisitions.
The downside of health care job growth.
Nurses on Boards Coalition. Nurses on Boards: The time for change is now.
There was always a shortage. COVID just made it worse. Once nurses realized they can deal with the same BS but for three to five times what they were making that was it. It also finally exposed on a national level what nurses have been dealing with on a daily basis (before and during covid). It also exposed how underpaid we are compared to other healthcare professionals (only profession where I seem to be responsible for the mistakes of others who went through more schooling/training and make more money than I do).
The shortage can also be attributed to how toxic they have made the bedside. There are nurses out there who enjoy working the bedside. I enjoyed working stepdown/PCU bedside until too much BS from administration caused me to move away.
As for nursing on the boards....it sounds like a good idea but let's be honest. The wrong nurses would be put on the boards. You know, the ones who did the bare minimum at the bedside and then went into management/administration who now make the decisions for all of us despite having the least amount of experience. All you have to do is look at the CNO who forgot where they came from. That's who would get the board seat, not the nurse who put their time in.
alties
10 hours ago, toomuchbaloney said:Dialysis is one of those areas of profit driven health specialty, right? I bet that's "fun" work.
Just about all specialties are profit driven if we're honest, we don't make money if we don't treat sick people. But not just anyone can get dialysis treatments, a patients labs must be at certain points or no reimbursement, and a nephrologist won't approve treatments without supporting labs. Not all companies are for profit, there are non profits (DCI is the first that comes to mind). As far as fun...not much in healthcare is fun, hasn't been remotely fun for years, but I do love what I do, so there's that ?
If anything COVID has shown me how hypicritical my hospital system is. A few years ago, they fired LVN's for not going back to school to get their BSN. We became a fancy magnet hospital. We're trying to renow now. ? We can't even get enough new nurses to apply for my unit. It's ridiculous. I think it was a long time coming. They're now welcoming LVN's with open arms, because it's staff. I feel I've been played. I'm staying because I hate change and a retention contract (5k). I had a friend dangle a ambulatory m-f no holiday surgery center job in front of my face and I hate change enough to STILL turn that down.
Hospitals can merge so you have fewer options, we need to do the same and unionize. A good friend, in a different state was fired over a petty mistake her first year in nursing in the 2000's in one of the TWO major systems in her area. She was fired a year ago for a few minor mistakes in the only other major system. Neither of the things that were listed were things that would get her fired on my floor. I think she asked for too much as an older nurse, made a surgeon mad, and didn't deliver the second time. She has 0 recourse and the only option now is nursing homes or home health, because an employer in her state can fire you for whatever reason you want, and if a major employer blacklists you, you can't get another job. If these hospital conglomerates are snapping up hospitals and our chances of jobs elsewhere, IMO, we need to unionize to protect ourselves.
Also the hospitals are activley compaigning against expanced medicare for 55 and up because they need the captive audience of older nurses to work for them. Don't feel sorry for them. They are getting billions in govt bailouts to maintain their profits all the while abusing the nurses and staff due to the fake shortgage! They win either way, just you and patients lose.
I don't work in a hospital, so I don't have to deal with a lot of the problems you list. As a private duty homecare nurse, my pay isn't much, but I enjoy my work. ?
Still, my agencies can't hire enough nurses. Out of 4 nurses on one of my cases, one died, two retired, and I was left with Monday through Friday every week, 40 hours, when I only want 30 or so. It took something like 8 months to hire in another nurse.
From where I'm sitting, it looks like a nursing shortage.
10 minutes ago, Kitiger said:I don't work in a hospital, so I don't have to deal with a lot of the problems you list. As a private duty homecare nurse, my pay isn't much, but I enjoy my work. ?
Still, my agencies can't hire enough nurses. Out of 4 nurses on one of my cases, one died, two retired, and I was left with Monday through Friday every week, 40 hours, when I only want 30 or so. It took something like 8 months to hire in another nurse.
From where I'm sitting, it looks like a nursing shortage.
It is man made due to lousy pay and poor working conditions. I am one of the millions who walked away rather than be abused. Pay was not a factor for me, total blatent disrespect and unsafe working conditions made my decision. But I totally support nurses getting the hazard pay they are due!
I am praying for the snake in a suit to get what's coming complete with termination with no severance that he orchestrated to peon workers before covid! His instagram tells you his black heart with a teddy bear burning! Linked in like's of children with disabilities stories is a cover since the CNO had a child die from one of the illnesses! Pay attention and you can see who one really works for! It is psuedo intellectual empathy, but the sociopath always finds a way to shine thru for the discerning heart to see!
On 10/26/2021 at 1:15 PM, brandy1017 said:Also the hospitals are activley compaigning against expanced medicare for 55 and up because they need the captive audience of older nurses to work for them. Don't feel sorry for them. They are getting billions in govt bailouts to maintain their profits all the while abusing the nurses and staff due to the fake shortgage! They win either way, just you and patients lose.
That is the tragedy. The patient is most definitely a loser in our current healthcare system. And we will all be patients sooner or later.
Emergent, RN
4,304 Posts
Covid-19 was definitely the straw that broke my back. I'm done with nursing, I am working at a farm store now for $15 an hour and I am so grateful for it. I also refuse to ever be a patient in the hospital where I cannot have my family visit me, I would rather die.