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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My sentiments also. Hospitals are no longer stand alone entities. Many, if not most, are subsets of large corporations whose primary loyalty is to the share holders. Maximizing revenue is the mantra now and if they are satisfied with the care one nurse can provide amongst 7 or 8 patients, then that is the way things will remain.We have too many nurses for the new healthcare reality.

I have read that the glut is expected to subside by 2020. If present trends continue, we could have another 500,000 to 1,000,000 nurses graduate in that time. I believe we are looking at a "lost generation" of licenced, but under qualified nurses.

Yes, many facilities are being taken over and or opened by large for profit corporations but the opposite isn't always the best either.

Here in NY where laws do not allow for profits to own hospitals nearly every single NYC hospital and quite a few elsewhere in the state are bleeding red ink. Places are closing left and and right with more to come. The Saint Vinny's system would have loved to find anyone with deep enough pockets to save them, but no one stepped up to the plate.

Yes. Most of California, NYC, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Las Vegas, and other locations are especially challenging for new grads and experienced nurses who have the wrong mix of experience.

In many of these places, even many of the nursing homes, home health agencies, prisons, and psychiatric facilities are requiring 1 to 3 years of experience because they are being inundated with applications from new grads.

Should like to point out something one mentioned before. It is not just nursing/healthcare where experienced persons are preferred over inexperienced, but across the American employment landscape.

Over the years there has been a steady erosion of the amount of time, effort and funds all employers are willing to put into training new hires. Today the ideal person for most jobs will be able to start work with minimal training, in short they want new employees that can hit the ground running.

In regards to nursing facilities have long complained that a good percentage of new grads for various reasons either do not last through orientation or run for the doors in

The other problem relates to the quality of nursing school graduates. Again facilities have long decided they are not in the business any longer of educating nurses. They will provide what is necessary for new hires to function, but most if not all flat out will tell you they aren't going to teach what they consider basic nursing skills.

Specializes in Hospice / Ambulatory Clinic.
Yes. Most of California, NYC, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Las Vegas, and other locations are especially challenging for new grads and experienced nurses who have the wrong mix of experience.

The wrong mix of experience bullet is the worst which is why new grad RN's have to fight so hard to get those new grad hospital position or be pigeonholed as a "B" nurse forever regardless of experience or skill.

Well thats my fear at least.

Wow, I guess it must really vary depending on where you live. I graduated 3 years ago, and I had a interview and job offer every place I applied. And I applied at a few different nursing homes, the county jail, an assisted breathing center in a hospital and a dialysis center. (in

full disclosure, the dialysis center would only hire me as a PCT). I can only imagine a new grad RN would have it twice as easy to find a job as a new grad LPN.

This may sound like a stupid thing to say, but I wonder if all the new grads struggling to find work are really exploring all their options. Are they only trying hospitals? Those are notoriously hard to get into. But are there really parts of the country where a new grad RN can't even get a job in LTC or dialysis or corrections?? I guess it must be so, going by all the posts here, but it's hard to believe from where I'm sitting....

As another poster already replied; it all depends upon local conditions on the ground.

Here in the NYC area the supply of native RNs both new and experienced for now far outstrips the number of gigs/hours available. From new grads not being hired anywhere (and that includes nursing homes, LTC, hospitals, and so forth) to experienced nurses not only unable to pick up overtime, but often facing reduced hours due to call offs and so forth.

In large "hip" urban areas and or states such as CA and NY not only do new grads have to compete with residents of their own state, but the fact that such places attract those from other places as well. In perhaps an odd development that many did not expect with the passage of "gay marriage" in NYS there seems to be an uptick of nurses following their spouses who have taken jobs here. From doctors, residents, former or current military, and so forth. Most are surprised that as nurses they cannot find jobs in NYC. There just aren't enough openings.

Specializes in Trauma.

A close friend of mine said she thinks many new grads don't stay at their original place of employment because often they are hired and treated like crap because they don't know much and it is hard to shake the "newbie" label. They then go to another job with some experience and are not treated as poorly. Sounds reasonable to me.

So, in an ironic sort of way, there's an advantage to being a nurse in an undesirable part of the "rust belt".

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
The wrong mix of experience bullet is the worst which is why new grad RN's have to fight so hard to get those new grad hospital position or be pigeonholed as a "B" nurse forever regardless of experience or skill.

Well thats my fear at least.

I'm one of those nurses who has the wrong mix of experience.

I have a total of 6.5 years of experience (4 years as an LVN and became an RN 2 years ago). My experience includes LTC, acute rehab, subacute rehab, and a little psych. I have never worked in an acute care hospital.

I have been living in Texas for the past 7 years, but have been attempting to return to my home state of California for the past year. However, I will not return without a job offer. I've been submitting applications in the most undesirable cities (Visalia, Bakersfield, Delano, Fresno, etc.), and have even gotten some callbacks, a couple of phone interviews, and one live interview.

All of my interviewers wanted candidates with at least one year of acute care hospital experience, even for non-hospital positions. My mix of non-acute experience is shooting me in the foot, but I'll continue to press on.

Specializes in Cardiac Nursing.

of course if you do have acute care experience, but as an lpn it also doesn't count for anything. i know the scope of practice is different for lpn's and rn's but why not accept the fact that i do have some acute care experience and teach me what i need to grow into the rn role.

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.
?????

!!!!!

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All posts mentioning popcorn relate to post #95 by malamud69, and the anticipated but never materialized entertaining reactions people expected. Most of them are contained between his post and around #125 or so. I'd requote it but I fear our collective good judgement may not hold up through a second take.

Specializes in Hospice / Ambulatory Clinic.
A close friend of mine said she thinks many new grads don't stay at their original place of employment because often they are hired and treated like crap because they don't know much and it is hard to shake the "newbie" label. They then go to another job with some experience and are not treated as poorly. Sounds reasonable to me.

I had an instructor that essentially advised me to leave my first position after one year for that reason. That even if you stayed there for years they would always remember the newbie moments. Of course that implies that the senior staff stick around which might be a good reason to stay.

Specializes in Hospice / Ambulatory Clinic.

All of my interviewers wanted candidates with at least one year of acute care hospital experience, even for non-hospital positions. My mix of non-acute experience is shooting me in the foot, but I'll continue to press on.

Even a couple of the bridge programs here want the LVN's to have 1 year acute experience. Luckily the one I was aiming for changed their position on the matter when it was repeatedly asked "where the badword were they going to get that from"

This just reinforces the fact that "we" the nursing community is not acting as a "gate keeper" in keeping the graduating number DOWN. If these grads aren't good enough to hire, they shouldn't have been admitted. Supply.and.Demand.

Things would be different if the profession of nursing functioned as a team, but in fact it often acts like it is a loose federation of warring tribes.