Nursing Shortage!! It's real and it bites (new grads, can't find a job? Read this post!)

Nurses General Nursing

Updated:   Published

I had no idea, when I took a job as a nurse manager of an inpatient unit at a rural hospital that's 4 hours away from the nearest large city, that a huge portion of my job stress would come from the fact that we DO NOT HAVE ENOUGH NURSES!!

Every unit at our facility has job openings. We have dozens of travelers. My department basically has just enough nurses to cover core staffing. What that means is - if there's a sick call, or a PTO request, or a medical leave of absence, we're short.

Thank Dog that my unit is awesome and they are a team and a family and are invested in the unit, because when we're short, the nurses pull together and volunteer to take OT and work 16 hour shifts.

The point of this post...if you're a new grad, and you can't find a job because the market is so competitive and every place is wanting a BSN...consider relocating! Look for those facilities that are in rural communities, or small towns that are >2 hours away from the nearest metro area that probably has multiple schools and a steady stream of new grad nurses to fill positions.

Coming from Denver, I had no idea that there really were places in the US that had shortages, but it's true, and it sucks. For patients, for communities, and for the nurses who are working short-staffed or working 60-hour work weeks because, well, we have no other options.

I have been working as an LPN for over 42 years and in all the different places I have worked it has been the same. Not enough nurses and in most cases the administration was doing nothing about it. All they cared about was that there was a body there for their numbers. But one thing I always remembered was my instructor saying. You don't become a nurse to have fun or become rich you do it because you love it. Even though I have retired I'm still doing nursing part time. I don't want to quit because I love it. In all the different places I have worked I always found friends and love from my patients. That's what counts.

Klone

I would LOVE to relocate. Sorry i cant PM you as i dont have enough posts. I dont have L&D experience but its a specialty i always wanted to work in. Im a fast learner & if your hospital is willing to train or precept i would love to relocate! Can you PM me more info?

Do you think your hospital could think about investing in building nurse's accommodation? I'm a British trained nurse and i've known several of my friends go off to Australia to work for a couple of years - some haven't come back! Like you, they also have terrible problems recruiting nurses to rural areas. Nurses working in remote areas in Australia get their travel expenses, accommodation, meals and incidental expenses paid. There are other financial incentives available, like better hourly rates, tax breaks and good on-call rates due to the nature of the job. (From: Remote Area Nursing - HealthTimes)

It might not be useful but I thought it might be interesting for you to see how another system addresses the same problem. And also to add to swaying the hospital executives into the long term investment of your staff.

Maybe the other thing you could do is think about offering a rotational program for newly qualified nurses to experience different areas of care and gain experience. Accept the fact that most will move on but utilise the fact that you can give them experience! I see so many posts on here about how someone or other wants to get a job but lacks the experience as a new graduate.

Now if only I had my US nursing license (which i'm working on) and I wasn't working in Nursing informatics... Because you had me at Rainforest and being from London, I'm pretty used to rain...

Specializes in Med/Surg/Infection Control/Geriatrics.

Yes, something needs to be done about the way new grads are handled. Just because a nurse doesn't have BSN after their name does not mean that they aren't valuable.

Many ASN nurses can find jobs in Minnesota. They can work in the hospitals, clinics, long term care and home health.

The older nurses need to take these newbies under their wings and nurture them, help them to fly. One day, we older nurses will need them.

We will probably always hear about the Nursing shortage. I remember once back in 1990, at my school for L.P.N. (previous), that "they are getting rid of the L.P.N.s and only hiring R.N.s" I don't think so. L.P.N.s are strong here and well in force. If my life hadn't changed, I still be one!

Specializes in Home dialysis training coordinator RN.

klone,

I am also new to this forum and cannot private message you to find out about the opportunities you have available; however, I am very interested. If you could also PM me concerning your location, it would be much appreciated. ?

Specializes in LTC.

A lot of hospitals in the US seem to only want BSN's, which is part of the problem in my opinion. They've shot themselves in the foot by getting rid of all the LPN's, and discouraging ADN RN's from applying.

But they still complain about the nursing shortage. 😂

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.
Crystal-Wings said:
A lot of hospitals in the US seem to only want BSN's, which is part of the problem in my opinion. They've shot themselves in the foot by getting rid of all the LPN's, and discouraging ADN RN's from applying.

But they still complain about the nursing shortage.

In my experience, hospitals that require or desire a BSN are in areas where they have plenty of nurses from which to choose, due to many nursing programs in the area graduating gluts of new grads (such as Denver, one area where I have personal experience).

Rural areas that are feeling the nursing shortage really do not care if the nurse has a BSN. They just need nurses, period.

Hi Klone,

At some point in the future, my husband and I are thinking of relocating to costal Oregon. We were fortunate enough to honeymoon there in October! We traveled from Portland through Florence and stayed in Gold Beach as well. To those who can relocate, Oregon is an amazing place!

Best of luck hiring some fortunate nurses!

The struggle is real!

I work in a medium sized hospital that has other resources and is connected with a large hospital for select specialties, but we are in the never ending cycle. We are the only local ER, the beds are constantly full, which makes our ratios high. We higher new staff, usually new grads, who need a lot of mentoring and guidance. Usually at about a year the new hires are fully functional and I no longer have to worry about them when I am charge, but during that year our experience ratio is way out of balance. We don't have enough experienced nurses and those that are there usually have 2 or 3 new nurses coming to them all shift because the charge is busy with patients or audits or meetings, and it wears the experienced nurses down. They have 6 patients and are trying to juggle all the questions, so they leave because they are burnt out.

The other scenario is that many of the new people hired to not want to work med-surg. As soon as they get an offer in a field they would prefer they leave.

And now we need to hire more nurses and aides. ?

Specializes in Emergency.
lifelearningrn said:
What part of Oregon? Forests near by? I'd be temped to relocate if it was one of the green/forest covered areas of Oregon! ;)

I don't know where klone is from but I had interviewed in a little community hospital in Astoria where I would have loved to work if not for my contracted commitment elsewhere. I may get there yet when this contract is up. Ocean, mountains, forests, rivers, big enough but not too big. Annnyyywayyy...

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.

For those of you whom I PM'ed with info about my area, please post here if you wish to get further information, and I will PM you my email address.

Please PM me, too! I live in a super-saturated area, and would love to branch out.

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