No Nursing Shortage At The Present Time

Despite rampant claims of a critical nursing shortage, many cities and states in the US are actually suffering from the opposite problem: a surplus of nurses. The intended purpose of this article is to challenge the widespread belief that a current nursing shortage exists. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

I am assured that some of you are reading this and saying to yourselves, "Duh! This topic is old hat. We already know there's a glut of nurses in many parts of the country, so why are you writing about this?"

Here is my reason for writing about the current surplus of nurses in local employment markets. I entered the term 'nursing shortage' into a popular search engine and yielded nearly 720,000 results. Afterward, I searched for the phrase 'no nursing shortage' using the same search engine and received about 59,000 results. Since the loud warnings of a dire nursing shortage are being hollered everywhere, I am going to do my part and shout some information that contradicts these claims.

Hospitals began experiencing a shortage of nurses in 1998, according to the American Hospital Association in 2002 (Ostrow, 2012). Colleges and universities aggressively responded to this shortage by expanding their existing nursing programs and/or starting new schools of nursing. Johnson & Johnson started an ad campaign to entice more people into the profession. Healthcare facilities responded to the shortage by offering more perks such as tuition reimbursement and scholarships to current employees.

Well, those efforts to increase the total number of nurses in the US have been wildly successful. The number of full-time nurses grew by about 386,000 from 2005 to 2010 and about a third of the growth occurred as unemployment rose to a high of 10 percent during that period, according to a report published in the New England Journal of Medicine (Ostrow, 2012). But still, the study raises an intriguing question: How did the nation go from a shortage to, if not a surplus, then at least an apparently adequate supply of nurses? (Rovner, 2011).

The federal government helped by increasing the funding for nursing programs to a whopping $240 million, up from $80 million in 2001. The proliferation of accelerated bachelor of science in nursing (BSN) degree programs and direct-entry master of science in nursing (MSN) degree programs also contributed to the rapid increase in the number of new nurses because students who hold non-nursing degrees can complete these training programs in 12 to 18 months.

The slumping economic situation in the US also contributed to the easing of the nursing shortage. Seasoned nurses are not retiring because many saw their retirement funds dwindle during the economic crisis of 2008. Other nurses have become breadwinners and accepted full-time positions once their spouses were laid off during the Great Recession. Some nurses are coming out of retirement and reactivating their nursing licenses. Moreover, masses of people lost health insurance benefits after becoming unemployed, which leads to reduced patient census in places that provide nursing care.

Thirty-six percent of nursing graduates in the class of 2011 had not secured positions as registered nurses (RNs) as of last fall, according to a survey conducted by the National Student Nurses' Association in September (Griswold, 2012). Of course, some states are afflicted with a worse glut of nurses than others. More than four out of ten (43 percent) of California nurses, who were newly licensed as registered nurses in the previous 18 months, say they could not find a job, according to a recent survey paid for by the California Institute for Nursing & Health Care (CVBT, 2012).

Experts predict that a nursing shortage will peak in the US in 2020. While these projections may turn out to be accurate, keep in mind that this country is continually producing record numbers of new nurses each year. Still, the nursing shortage of the late 1990s appears to have eased.

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Specializes in Hospice / Ambulatory Clinic.

That's cool I'll just order some walkers and tennis balls :)

Boy, that was alot of posts to read through!

I have a nurse (LPN) working for me who refuses to believe there is any such shortage at all. I mentioned to her reading about it online, that it isn't like it used to be, that she (or anyone) couldn't just pick up and find a new job down the block. She actually thinks that because we work in a small city and she's used to large cities, THAT'S the reason why nurses are having difficulty finding work. Not a shortage, just a shortage of jobs because we're not in a metropolitan area. And I think she's seriously mistaken.

She is good at what she does and I have no desire to replace her at all, but I wonder what kind of a shock it'd be for her to find that even in the big cities, she'd not be all that desirable. I suppose it's a selfish streak in me that wishes she could be a tad more thankful she HAS this job and the attitude that "I can get a job in the snap of my fingers" is a bit much! Especially since the rest of the staff seems to have a clue.

She worked in hospitals at a time when LPNs were commonplace, and now they're a rarity. She's working in an ambulatory/office setting at a time when most LPNs have been replaced by medical assistants. And still she feels she can pick herself up, declare her salary, and have her pick of jobs.

Not sure whether to feel sorry for her lack of foresight, or envy her lack of healthy fear.

...and here I sit without so much as a kernel of caramel popcorn to my name.

Truly, a travesty.

Specializes in Hospice / Ambulatory Clinic.

*tosses a solitary kernel over*

I think the whole I can quit my job in a blaze of glory and have another one by the afternoon attitude went on so long it's almost unfathomable to those who haven't had to job hunt in a long time to consider they aren't hot stuff anymore.

I know a couple of actors/nurses who used registry nursing to support their acting "careers" now they are struggling actors AND nurses. They are still ok but can't no longer live the hollywood lifestyle they were used to with fitting work around auditions etc etc.

*catches the kernel and wishes for more*

Well, like I said, I'm not sure whether to envy her feeling of security and desirability or pity her lack of understanding over the current state of affairs. Particularly since she's not only not likely to find another job quickly, but as an LPN, she'd only be finding work at one of our local understaffed nursing homes (in those, there always seem to be openings).

I guess it's good she's solid with me :)

Do you guys believe people would still want to become nurses if schools did the right thing and told potential students"More than likely,most of you who are graduating will likely end up working in nursing homes or home care?"Reason I'm asking because community based care doesn't pay as well as hospital based nursing.

One more reason I think there is a nursing glut is because the schools are graduating people who don't belong there at all.At my school there were people who graduated with all C's.My school would also curve grades a lot.The students who were more social passed even though they got bad grades and always failed tests.My school always put more emphasis on nursing skills rather than grades,so that the students who did terrible on the class portion but did great in the clinical portion still passed. I know lots of nurses who are great at skills but terrible about giving out correct info or don't know basics about common diseases.Some jobs have wised up though. I would say over 75% of nursing jobs I had applied to in three years have asked for transcripts. This is a recent thing that I read nursing jobs do nowadays to weed out some applicants. I alsocame across a few that ch. eck credit reports

I know I typed another post to this thread.....apparently it was lost....in some manner/way.

Yes unrestrained capitalism, that is unrestrained by ethics, morals, or law, does not work.

I can remember reading a quote once, I think it was a grandson of John D Rockefeller, that his grandfather had not broken any laws, but a lot of laws were passed because of him.

How about "Truth in advertising"?

On I alsocame across a few that ch. eck credit reports

That's it - pass the popcorn... if I didn't JUST get a new grad job I wouldn't be able to in that case, bcause they would weed me out based on credit without ever knowing that it was because my husband left me the 1st day of nursing school with two kids, no job, and no child support... but then again - I still have my "GroupOne" background check pending... ugh

I understand it's a weed out process but WTH does credit have to do with being a nurse? Sometimes credit issues are a matter of circumstance, not irresponsibility. A credit check without knowing an applicant's true background is in poor taste... but that's just my :twocents:

Specializes in Hospice / Ambulatory Clinic.

From what I can understand they use it as a way of telling if your irresponsible of if you might be in a position to be tempted to steal from your employer. I guess it's more intended to be used in positions where your directly handling cash. But is it irresponsible when you suddenly don't have money IDK. Maybe they are looking for specific things like gambling debts or medical collections.

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
Maybe they are looking for specific things like gambling debts or medical collections.
Some credit reports also list previous employers. Therefore, companies can sometimes tell if you are being dishonest about your work history if they see a job on the credit report that you failed to mention.

Many people with checkered work histories try to hide some of their past, but the credit report may potentially expose any lies.

My advise(re: credit reporting , employment applications and crdit cards)- file for banckruptcy- they take those little cards from you right then and there. Then you have to pay every thing in cash.:D "My lips are sealed" Bankruptcy does have it's privlidges.

There was a case maybe 2 years ao of an unemployed father( he had custody of his young boys) who was trying to get a job but continued to be turned down due to his poor credit history which was due to his inablity to pay his bills which was due to his unemployment- the catch 22 effect. i think it was with that that companies were forced to not rely so heavily on the the almighty credit report

I wonder if the transcript thing is not because of the 'language' in some job postings " Must be a graduate of an NLN or AACN accredited school of professional nursing"