Published May 9, 2009
VickyRN, MSN, DNP, RN
49 Articles; 5,349 Posts
$125 million for title viii nursing education loan repayment program
40 percent more requested for nurse faculty loan program
[color=#234c84]increases will help address nurse and nurse faculty shortages
demand for spots in nursing programs continues to dramatically outstrip supply. the national league for nursing found that an estimated 99,000 qualified applications-or almost 40 percent of qualified applications submitted to prelicensure rn programs-were rejected in 2006-07. a particular focus on securing and retaining adequate numbers of faculty is essential to ensure that all individuals interested in-and qualified for-nursing school can matriculate in the year that they are accepted.
the president's budget also requests $265 million for title vii, a 19.4 percent increase over the fy 2009 omnibus bill. this funding level represents increases for most of title vii's health professions training programs which, stated nln president dr. elaine tagliareni, "are an essential component of our health care safety net, representing, along with title viii, the only federal programs designed to train providers in interdisciplinary settings to meet the needs of special and underserved populations, and increase minority representation in the health care workforce."
concluded dr. malone, "it is gratifying to see that attention is being paid to the critical need to reverse the acute shortage of nurses and concomitant shortage of nurse educators so that the nation's health care needs may be appropriately addressed. as the voice for nursing education and nurse educators, the national league for nursing will continue to advocate for the increased investment in nurse workforce development that is essential for the prosperity and health of all americans."
http://www.nln.org/newsreleases/pres_budget_050809.htm