Nursing Shortage

Nurses General Nursing

Published

"The nursing shortage lies--local major hospital corporations are not hiring nurses, despite continuing to falsely post job openings"

Knoxville, Tennessee

December 1, 2013

After deciding to go to school to become a Registered Nurse, many had the hopes and promises of never being unemployed or ever having to worry about finding a job. So many figured this would be a good investment in their future--but it may be time to reconsider that idea.

For as long as I can remember, and most definitely for as long as I had aspired to be a nurse, I had been hearing the term 'nursing shortage' tossed around by the multiple media streams as well as from other healthcare professionals. It was brought up everywhere. If you looked for example, in the newspaper, you would find ads boasting huge sign on bonuses for Registered Nurses with excellent wages and benefits-- some even paid continuing education opportunities.

Many people began to jump on the bandwagon to obtaining their nursing degrees. With many opting to do BSN programs, there were also many ADN programs that offered nursing education and the 'RN' title after only 2 years of study. This made it appealing to a lot of already employed individuals looking for a stable, steady career change. All kinds of nursing programs began to spring up, with as many as 6-10 nursing programs per city or region. Most of these programs here in Knoxville are producing roughly 60-100 nurses every 2 or 4 years depending on the program, but with a job outlook growth projected at "faster than average" and the "shortage of nurses", it seems like a no brainer! With quotes like this plastered all over the American Nurse's Association's website, where could you possibly go wrong?

The Shortage Isn't Stopping Soon
You've likely heard about the "nursing shortage" for years now, and perhaps you think it's been resolved. However, registered nurses are still at the top of the list when it comes to employment growth (BLS, 2010).

What we have failed to see as a society is the impact of market saturation. With so many local nursing programs producing a steady supply of new graduates, it's not difficult to see that eventually the supply is going to exceed demand in any given geographical region, as it has already done here in Knoxville. But this isn't the only contributing factor in and of itself. This is just one of the complicating factors in a multiple faceted, bigger issue.

At the same time we saw such an increase in the amount of nurses that were being turned out into the job market, we also began to see some political changes within the healthcare industry itself, in particularly with the hospitals. Many of the smaller market hospitals began to merge or be 'bought out' by larger corporations, such as Covenant Health and Tennova Healthcare Systems. These larger corporations have ended up owning many smaller hospitals and dominate the job market in the Knoxville area. This is a great investment for the corporations, but can be pure disaster for the nurse seeking employment.

If those two strikes aren't enough to put nurses behind the eight ball, then add in the fact that many jobs that used to be held only by Registered Nurses are now being filled by Licensed Practical Nurses, Certified Nursing Assistants, and Medical Assistants. This is in part due to an increase in the availability of educational programs for these careers. Also, the job descriptions have changed which allow these individuals to do more than the previously could, thus eliminating the need for RN's. This also eliminates the need for a company to pay RN wages for the same tasks that can be done by a CNA or LPN.

This leads to another problem that is wreaking havoc on nursing job opportunities--the greediness of these large corporations. The idea of "doing more with less" has caught on BIG with employers. In jobs, such as retail, this only hurts the employee by working them to a personal limit and exhaustion. In the employer's eye, if they can get one person to do the work of three people, then why would they want to pay three people? This idea has really taken a hold on the nursing industry as well. The employers however, have neglected to see the real problem with this. When you implement this ideology, not only do you work the employee beyond his or her limits, but you also endanger the lives of patients. I have found this to be the case first hand, working for Covenant Health. This is especially true on medical surgical units and critical care units. It is not uncommon for one nurse to carry the load of 7-8 patients per shift on a medical surgical unit and 3 patients at a time in a critical care unit. This patient to nurse ratio has increase drastically over the past few years and is simply unsafe practice. I can remember having traveling nurses come to our facility, see our nurse to patient ratio and make comments about how 'unsafe" they felt working with that load. The employers are slowly increasing the workload per person until they find a "breaking point", which usually consists of a patient harm event and/or a subsequent lawsuit involving patient harm. Unfortunately, patients must be injured or harmed before the issue is viewed in any other light aside from a "bottom line" or "money" issue. Despite bringing these issues up in staff development meeting numerous times, it was always "blown off" as not important. These large corporations are able to get away with such treatment of their employees because of the very thing they are creating--the saturation of nurses and the fact that they dominate the market. If you have nurses that are seeking jobs so desperately, then they are willing to "put up" with harsher working conditions and lower wages in spite of having a "job". At the same time, the reason for those harsher working conditions is greediness from the employers by not hiring additional nurses to spread the workload out and make conditions safer for everyone. It's a vicious cycle and until the healthcare corporations such as Covenant and Tennova realize this, they may be facing more patient dissatisfaction and lawsuits than they bargained for.

Interestingly enough, employers do a great job of "masking" the fact that they aren't hiring new nurses too. Just go to any large hospital website and view the job opening boards. You would be amazed at the amount of "open" positions that are posted there. I have heard from numerous nurses, that even after applying for upwards of 30 positions, they have yet to receive one call for an interview. I have experienced the same thing first hand. After speaking with one local Human Resources agent, it was apparent that their facility had only hired five RN's over the past 5 months, despite countless pages of open job postings. I have spoken with several managers who have informed me that hiring is just 'dead' and there are no plans to hire additional nurses, especially before the beginning of the year at the earliest. In addition, you never see those attractive 'sign on' bonuses that once were a commonplace among nursing positions.

If these large hospital corporations are not going to hire new nurses, and we have in fact seen the end of the 'nursing shortage era", then they at least need to stop feeding the public a constant stream of lies by continuing to post job openings daily. This is a very misleading and dirty way to do business in the community.

Yeah, you pulled up one post--from May. I figured if it was that big of a deal, it'd show up on the first page or two of posts in the history.

No one's perfect. My point was that in general, Bucky seems to use dashes correctly.

I think you mean "separate".

Are you on here to debate issues or defend other members?

SoilderNurse22, who do you think you are? Of course no one is perfect, especially once I prove it to you by showing you proof. If you can't say anything nice, it's best to just keep your comments to yourself!

Zack, chill. Seriously. Your earlier post on this thread about finding it funny when people get defensive at the smallest thing is really starting to read ironically.

Besides, we're about to get a mod warning to stay on topic. I can sense it.

The nursing "shortage" was based on numbers that were inflated based on the "Mandatory Staffing ratios" that were going to sweep the country! Like it passed in California. It never happened. Any legislation for staffing ratios went out with the stock market crash in 2008. As the baby boomers were supposed to retire couldn't because they lost their retirement funds and 401K when the market crash...only the bankers got bailed out....not the little guy. Their spouses were laid off jobs were not available they had kids in college so they continue to work. The baby boomers that I know are going to work until they drop dead because they can not afford to retire...all their 401K's are decimated and they will never recoup the loss for their employer contributions are just plain gone....forever.

There was never really a "shortage".

However, we will eventually have no choice but retire or die. Nursing is cyclical...I believe that there will be a need once again but the gravy days are long gone.

It's funny that this rumor has been out there for so long. I can remember when I was in elementary school and people (nurses included) told me that there was a shortage and nursing would offer great job security. Oh, and it'll pay great, too! :banghead: It amazes me that people still believe that line.

SoilderNurse22, you remind me of a typical person who finds pleasure in degrading other people and arguing about stuff that isn't even on topic.

If you want to proofread and correct grammar for a living, then nursing wasn't a very smart career choice for you!

No need to get defensive, Zack. I'm not about to get off-topic by checking another member's post history to divulge a minute grammatical error.

It's all right to have interests in talents that aren't related to nursing. Sometimes, it's even beneficial, especially when there's not really a shortage and you may need to find another job while awaiting hire as an RN! (Look, we're back on topic!)

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.

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This thread is about nursing shortage and difficulties in the job market. Please stick to topic!

If you wish to debate grammar....please start another thread.

Hey, I wasn't the one who got on here and started griping about my grammar, so you started it and now you should have to finish it!

I'm perfectly chill until someone starts up a stupid conversation about grammar. Give me a break!

I didn't start the griping. Please read your own thread before you start making accusations.

T-10 seconds to mod deletion.

Specializes in Anesthesia, ICU, PCU.

This is off the main topic, but more along the tangent the thread has gone on...

In the city I live in, there are 5 major BSN programs and as many ADN programs in the area churning out scores of nurses. The ADN programs located in hospitals are apt to take their graduates, while those BSN and ASN new grads are rejected from these very same hospitals. My guess for the rationale behind this is they know the caliber of RNs they produce since they're doing the teaching.

Not to be judgmental of others' degrees at all, but I do scratch my head at why they would take a non-Bachelor over a BSN when the emphasis in this field seems to be increasing the number of practicing RN/BSNs. ADN programs seem to place more emphasis on clinical hours than BSN programs, leading to a more hospital-ready workforce at the time of graduation. That's is exactly what a NGN needs to be: hospital-ready. On the other hand, BSNs are required to complete so many more credits and take so many more classes. Many programs require these classes AND a high GPA after completion before even starting nursing school (however this 2+2 modality is being phased out around me). Which is a more difficult transition: learning hospital nursing after spending all that academic BSN time, or achieving a BSN degree while working full time as a RN?

Personally I went the new BSN right out of high school route. I think my connection as a "nurse extern" *cough*CNA/PCA*cough* got me my job at my current hospital. Not to say it was the formality of being an employee already, but my extern job there gave me experience and exposure to the true nursing field beyond anything a nursing school clinical could do. Pulling 8 and 12 hour shifts and spending 40 hour weeks over the summer really put the whole profession into perspective; it gave me an experience and readiness my other non-extern, BSN counterparts simply didn't have. This was quite noticeable by my clinical professors evaluations the next year when I participated alongside those who spent their summers on vacation. And that's what is seen in new ADNs versus new BSNs - increased clinical exposure makes a person more prepared for the hospital workforce at graduation.

I view my one coworker as a model nurse. She is extremely intelligent, always ready, always calm and collected, always on top of her workload, makes the best recommendations to the MDs for treatments, stabilizes declining patients, helps her other nurses without missing a beat, and is preferred and respected by patients, managers, and coworkers alike. If I can become even close to how good of a nurse she is, I will be complete. She is an ADN.

No need to get defensive, Zack. I'm not about to get off-topic by checking another member's post history to divulge a minute grammatical error.

It's all right to have interests in talents that aren't related to nursing. Sometimes, it's even beneficial, especially when there's not really a shortage and you may need to find another job while awaiting hire as an RN! (Look, we're back on topic!)

I DO have a job as an RN thank you very much.

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.

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