Published
An article found in the recent archives of the Cheyenne paper. Comment made by the WNA states 18% of nurses are busy doing something other than nursing. Here is the article:
Shortage becoming critical
Joanne Bowlby
Wyoming Tribune-Eagle
Wyoming Tribune-Eagle
CHEYENNE - Long waits in emergency rooms and rushed doctor's office visits are just some of the annoying effects for patients from the national nursing shortage.
But more critical problems are beginning to surface.
School secretaries are dispensing medications like Prozac and Ritalin when the nurse is not available.
Nursing home patients aren't always getting the personalized care for which they pay.
Hospitals may be the hardest hit. A recent survey shows that a shortage of nurses in hospitals can strongly affect the chances of patients suffering adverse reactions like gastrointestinal bleeding and pneumonia. Researchers said staffing problems could be a factor in thousands of deaths annually.
Nurses say the shortage is becoming so severe that it threatens patient care.
"It increases the risk of something serious happening and increases the hospital's liability," said Michelle, an emergency room nurse at United Medical Center-West. "As nurses, we don't want to see anything happen, but it could."
ER nurses don't use their last names for safety reasons.
"The nursing shortage is a big ball of problems," Michelle added. "When patient numbers increase, the number of nurses needs to increase, but I don't think that's happening."
Part of the problem is there aren't many nurses out there.
But Wyoming Nurses Association President Toni Decklever said a bigger problem is the 18 percent of registered nurses who are not working in the field.
"Where are they?" she said. "Delivering packages or stocking shelves."
They're in other jobs where the pay and work conditions are better, she said.
Patients suffer the consequences. Nurses from around Cheyenne say they are frustrated and can't give the level of care they think patients deserve because there are more patients to see and fewer nurses to help with the workload.
How did it get this bad?
There are 77 million aging Baby Boomers who will need medical care in increasing numbers in the coming years.
With only 44 million people in Generation X, all industries are finding it difficult to find qualified workers. Nursing homes have been hit particularly hard.
Not only has the number of people enrolling in nursing schools dropped over the past decade, the number of people who need a nursing home has risen significantly.
"As less people are available to work, we are aging," said Kathy Sanford, director of nursing at Harrison Memorial Hospital in Bremerton, Wash. "It's a double whammy.
"This is the smallest job pool since the 1960s. We are competing with others that are going to have shortages too."
Sanford said in Washington state, less than 9 percent of the nursing staff is under the age of 30, and more than half of the work force is scheduled to retire within the next 15 years.
Washington's statistics mirror the nation, she said.
Industry issues addressed
Many students are opting for professions other than nursing, Sanford said, because "the work is really, really hard."
She said the industry as a whole needs to address the problem and change the image of nursing to attract students into the profession.
But she said changing the image isn't enough.
"It's no good if once they get in, it's no fun," Sanford said.
Carol Polifroni, dean of the Connecticut School of Nursing, agrees. She said studies have shown people shape their ideas about careers as early as age 6.
The industry is suffering from treating its staff poorly, she said.
Long shifts produce exhausted mothers. Polifroni said she worries that the negative impact could have lasting effects.
"Mom's a nurse now and comes home from work exhausted," she said. "The natural response is, 'I don't want to do that. I don't want to work so hard for so little money.' "
Some possible solutions
Both short-term and long-term solutions must be developed, she said. Among her suggestions:
Get as many certified nurses back into the work force as possible.
Get high school students interested in nursing.
Increase salaries.
But Polifroni said the most important change needed is to give greater respect and autonomy to the profession.
Excessive paperwork and mandatory overtime frustrates nurses and makes them feel less like caregivers and more like robots, she said.
Polifroni has asked the Connecticut Legislature to recognize the work nurses do and provide some incentives for nurses to work in the state.
Loan forgiveness, scholarships and low-interest mortgages for nurses are just a few of the measures she has proposed. A legislative committee is looking into those ideas.
"Connecticut is ahead of the curve," Polifroni said. "We have a joint task force that is bringing all the parties to the table.
"The plan needs to be multi-pronged and carefully constructed. Recruitment, debt forgiveness, scholarships - all have to happen at once. Money alone won't solve this."
Sanford said any community can develop a similar task force.
Led by the local Rotary club, her community has assembled a group to look into solutions to stave off further shortages.
"It's not just a hospital problem or a nursing problem; this is a community problem," Sanford said. "Things have to change."
B.:roll
First things first: Go to http://www.MiNurses.org and get registered to attend NURSE IMPACT on April 23rd.
After experiencing that, you will have the answers to your question.
have a great time.
JT, one of the hidden causes of the nurse shortage was also the fact that federal funding for nursing education was severely cut over the past 10 years (during the "fantastic" 90's!) to bare bones. No $$$$ for education, no encouragement for new nurses. (This was all the while that there was a reported EXCESS of med students and federal funding for medical schools continued to increase!).
JT, you are SO right in telling new nurses to GET INVOLVED in their state nurses associations! You and I have both learned so much from our involvement in our respective associations. Not only does it energize us, but our involvement changes the state associations! If nurses don't like what their state associations are doing, join, get involved, and the face and direction of the state association will change. New interested bodies are always welcomed in any volunteer organization; LISTEN and LEARN what they have to say, then you can begin to change the organization from the inside. Get other staff nurses involved with you. By doing this as a member, the cliques disappear and the organization as a whole will benefit with your involvement.
Is anyone part of the MI nurses association.?
I'm from MI. I'm curious how much dues are for the MI nurses association. Exactly what I could expect. If anyone has any personal experience please reply or e-mail me at [email protected]
Thanks!!
Mi NA is the professional state association and also an RN labor union. In state associations that have both these branches, membership dues are usually less for those members who are not also in the union branch of the association. That is, if you work at a facility that is non-union or you work at a facility where the nurses are represented by a different union, or even if you dont work at all, you can still be a member of your state association, vote on issues that direct nursing in your state, participate and get involved in many areas. But since you are not using its union services, you usually pay less membership fees than those who are also in the union branch.
You can get specific answers as to the amounts by contacting the association from their website. When my daughter wanted to go to dancing school, we went to a few schools and watched some classes before deciding on which one to register her for. When I wanted to buy my new car, I test drove it before closing the deal. Before anyone buys anything, its a good idea to first know what youre paying for. Id suggest attending one of Mi NA's events and seeing the organization at work, learning what its about, and then making your informed decision.
And I still recommend attending NURSE IMPACT on April 23rd as being a very good way to do that.
The legislation that encourages enrollment in programs leading to an RN is definetly needed but is really only a side bar to the real issues. The lack of respect that RN s are professionals and need to be treated as such.(Hospitals are run by the feudal systems and the people delivering patient care are the serfs) By their actions, poor working conditions, the hospitals have driven out RNs. You can entice many to enter the profession but unless the hospital changes its ways it will only be a revolving door. As the newly minted RN will seek employment outside of hospitals or Nursing altogether.
Hi. I just recently read that only around 10% of nurses today are under the age of 30. I believe I recently read in the Human Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the Department of Health and Human Services that only 10% of nurses are 30 years old or less. Someone can correct me, but I also thought I heard a shortage of 1200 nurses or nursing assistants in my neck of the woods, GA. I believe this will be the worse shortage in my experience because it's going to be chronic.
joyrochelle
238 Posts
wow! thanks for all the information! I will use it definitely! ---joy