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.
I just wanted to comment quickly and let you know I have heard over the past 5 years how there is a nursing shortage. Over and over again on television and even through adult school classes they are constantly trying to convince us that we should apply for nursing school. Do I know that is not true? Absolutely! I live in San Diego and it seems like everyone is fighting each other for the best GPA and for a way into the medical field to gain acute experience. Will that stop me from also trying to be a nurse?Nope not at all. Not because of what a secure job it could be or the great pay but because I really want to be a nurse. When I am helping someone there is nothing else on my mind, and I personally love all the bloody stuff :) I know I have a challenge ahead of me but it is my dream. I have had several different types of jobs over the past 10 years but this is the one thing I haven't let go of. What I am saying is I agree with you that the lies need to stop. My reason for that would be so that those who want it for more than money can continue.
I want to type freely and don't offend anyone.
I hear you!! I just finished my ADN program and i will be working in a LTC/SNF until i gain enough exoerience to get into a LTACH which is ehat i really want to do. And.you are right, they are trying to take away the title of "doctor" away from the DNP nurses......further more why do you think this nursing degree is a scam? What the sad part is from what i have seen here on AN is no matter what you type someone somewhere is going to read it and become offeneded. My advice to you: type as freely as you want! I support you! :smiley:
OP- I thought your article was very informative. As an ADN grad with no previous work experience, I'm having a difficult time finding a job at a hospital. Some places would deny my application less than 3 hours after it was sent. I'm pretty sure no one actually read it..I just didn't have enough key words in it to make it to a real person. I am worried about starting out at a LTC facility because after 6 months I will no longer be a new grad and hospitals don't consider LTC "acute care", so it's not factored in as acute care experience, which most hospitals want you to have 6 to 12 months of. I need to go back for my BSN to help make me competitive, magnet status is a big deal down here in FL, but that means another year and a half of distance is put between me and my last clinical experience. Seems like a catch 22 to me. Had no idea that there were people out there having a hard time finding work with 1 year acute care experience. Hope you are able to find something soon :)
I agree with the part of your post where you said that hospitals like to make one person do the work of three people. My unit at my hospital is always short staffed but that's the way they want it. There could be jobs for other nurses if the hospital wasn't too cheap to pay to keep the place staffed adequately. But it's a business and the dollar is all that matters...apparently much more than patient safety, good nursing care, and employee satisfaction and retention. It's a sad situation. The patients are the ones who suffer the most because they don't get the kind of care they deserve thanks to cheapskate staffing.
Well, having the bubble burst isn't such a bad thing, to be frank.This ^^ makes me sad that anybody would view nurses as "monitors". I'm sure not all doctors view nurses so lowly, but I agree with nurseaig, that all of us should get along and critique each other constructively.Really breaks my heart to see all these posts about the extensive negative comments towards nursing, and what nightmare being a nurse is. I'm just starting nursing school on January and I've been literally YANKED OUT of my bubble :'(
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That said, see my post https://allnurses.com/general-nursing-discussion/just-has-said-891220.html to see that there is hope... there are many of us who actually like our jobs.
I work with hundreds of doctors who don't seem to view us lowly... many of them, when presented with a problem simply ask, "what do you want?" Meaning, "tell me the order that you need, I'll put it in..."
Sure, some of the docs are weenies... and so are some of the nurses... for the most part, though, everybody is pretty dang good to work with.
This was true, too, at my last two jobs... most of my colleagues - MDs and RNs - were decent folks and good to work with.
OP I've enjoyed reading your post. The nursing workforce is facing the same issues across the globe. In fact, I spoke with a friend this week, a University instructor re: the "nursing shortage".
"Where are the schools in all this? If students aren't receiving offers, they also have some responsibility. Clearly, the schools and these facilities have been aware for quite some time of the trends."
Yes, and they just want your money.
Those job postings are factored in to the hospital budget, so they have to post the jobs. They aren't filling many of them.
How long can people be expected to wait for the "shortage" and work to their breaking point? Time will tell. These politicians certainly are not examining health from a proactive lens.
Marsha238612
357 Posts
Thanks SoldierNurse22 for congratulating me on being accepted into nursing school.
And Yeah that's true about the backstabbing being the norm at most jobs.
I will try to keep my eyes open and learn a lot in nursing school.
Thanks again for your uplifting words.
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