So after leaving the polls running for several weeks the one I felt most interesting was ...
This deep recession (or depression, as some are now calling it) has not left healthcare unscathed. It is worldwide in its effect, which makes a quick recovery very unlikely. Jobs that were once thought to be "recession-proof" are proving not to be. Many hospitals - the nurses' main employers - have been operating for years on a razor-thin profit margin. Nursing jobs are not nearly as plentiful, many hospitals are having hiring freezes, some hospitals are closing down entirely. The entire US economy is undergoing a radical reconstruction with many jobs disappearing for good. The effects of an implosion of the runaway overgrown credit economy and market globilization must run their course. We are just a few steps away from government takeover of healthcare, and what this will mean for the profession of nursing in the US is uncertain. We are definitely living in turbulent times.
I agree with Vicki. We hear how short staffed hospitals and yet it is almost impossible to find a job now. I was doing travel nursing, my last contract ended early July 2008. I couldn't find a new assignment chose to take a few weeks off and go home for a visit, I finally gave up looking for a travel assignment (I wasn't specialized) in med/surg. I am originally from Canada but hadn't worked there in years, but decided to take a permanent position in a new hospital because it was available. I keep looking to relocate back to the US in California or Arizona and there seem to be very little in the way of jobs at all now. My friends who have been travel nursing tell me the same stories about no jobs either travel or permanent. I can only imagine how much of a mess the hospitals will be in at the end of this recession/depression if they are already short staffed. My heart goes out to new grads, laid off nurses and patients alike. Just when health care is needed more than ever there are cut backs, hiring freezes and wage freezes, or less wages for new hires.
I honestly believe that if we are patient we will see a change in the recruiting at hospitals, most of the hospitals have run scared and put a stop without much regard for the future. You cannot run a hospital on NO staff, natrual wastage by retirement, death, illness is going to occur, staff are going to find other jobs and then we will find panic in the oppersite direction-mass recruiting.
Unlike some industries where lay offs may be affecting people for 10's of years to come, Health care is a neccessary evil. We will still have the same expectations, illnesses, accidents and so on they will not go away nor will they wait for finances to improve-it is not like buying a car.
The full impact of this nursing shortage will not be felt until about 2015. I've been a RN x 33 years now, and my group is TIRED. . . tired of working short-staffed, tired being relatively poorly paid, and tired of being disrespected by the new regimes. I'm happier teaching and consulting with just a wee bit of hospice every now and again. Prepare for the worst. . .duck and cover. . .it IS coming!
If hospitals want more nurses, and they say they do, they should make positions more appealing to baby boomer nurses. Offer 8 or 10 hour shifts instead of just 12's. Be willing to provide a little extra training to nurses who have been in a different field. Pay for necessary classes. Utilize older nurses for less physically demanding jobs. I've found there is age discrimination in nursing just like most other fields. If they can hire a new grad for less than a nurse with decades of experience, they will.
Thanks for your reply. I have fibromyalgia so physical exertion and stamina are important considerations. My fibro has improved immensely over the years (if interested, ask me how) but is still a factor. I went from 12-hour shifts in a busy ER to senior health management but those jobs are limited in my area. The state does not require any nurses in assisted living facilities so most companies aren't willing to pay for them. Caregivers with 8 hours of training (the new requirement) act as med techs in many large and small AL's. Residents and families are not aware of the high med error rates with this system and, in my experience, management prefers not to know because knowledge requires action. I love the geriatric/dementia population but job stability (or lack thereof) is often tied to the census rather than performance.
... the opinion of US trained nurses opinion on Foreign trained nurses, only 54 people voted on this poll which is surprising since we have hundreds of thousands members of which a large percent must be from the USA, (note to myself I must find out the figure from the Admin dept.) A quick summery of some of the results so far (sorry tried to paste the results in a graph and could not do it)
https://allnurses.com/general-nursing-polls/us-rns-what-370278.html
Interesting that 42.59% feel that immigrant nurses take jobs away from US nurses, now what I would like to do is find out if the nurses who feel this way are New Grads who are having difficulty finding employment at the moment or if these are seasoned nurses who have this opinion.
39.89% believe that Immigrant nurses are a valued member of the nursing community, so if this were a general election.............immigrant nurses would lose?????
Yet we know until recently there wasn't enough nurses in the US, and in my opinion there still are not enough nurses here. The immigrant nurses filled the Gap, now what we are seeing is less nurses, same amount of pts and increased work load especially in Phoenix.
I know however that many potential RN's feel that there are not enough schools, training opportunities, and places available for American student nurses.
We also face the problem of the aging population, the so called Baby Boomers=Seventy-six million American babies were born between 1946 and 1960.
Baby boomers - Wikipedia
Current and Projected Shortage Indicators
In a statement released in March 2008, The Council on Physician and Nurse Supply, an independent group of health care leaders based at the University of Pennsylvania, has determined that 30,000 additional nurses should be graduated annually to meet the nation's healthcare needs, an expansion of 30% over the current number of annual nurse graduates.
According to the latest projections from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics published in the November 2007 Monthly Labor Review, more than one million new and replacement nurses will be needed by 2016. Government analysts project that more than 587,000 new nursing positions will be created through 2016 (a 23.5% increase), making nursing the nation's top profession in terms of projected job growth. www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2007/11/art5full.pdf
In April 2006, officials with the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) released projections that the nation's nursing shortage would grow to more than one million nurses by the year 2020. In the report titled What is Behind HRSA's Projected Supply, Demand, and Shortage of Registered Nurses?, analysts show that all 50 states will experience a shortage of nurses to varying degrees by the year 2015.
Contributing Factors Impacting the Nursing Shortage
Enrollment in schools of nursing is not growing fast enough to meet the projected demand for nurses over the next ten years.
Though AACN reported a 5.4% enrollment increase in entry-level baccalaureate programs in nursing in 2007 over the previous year, this increase is not sufficient to meet the projected demand for nurses. HRSA officials stated in an April 2006 report that "to meet the projected growth in demand for RN services, the U.S. must graduate approximately 90 percent more nurses from US nursing programs."
A shortage of nursing school faculty is restricting nursing program enrollments.
With fewer new nurses entering the profession, the average age of the RN is climbing.
According to the 2004 National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses released in February 2007 by the federal Division of Nursing, the average age of the RN population in March 2004 was 46.8 years of age, up from 45.2 in 2000. The RN population under the age of 30 dropped from 9.0% of the nursing population in 2000 to 8.0% in 2004.
The total population of registered nurses is growing at a slow rate.
According to the latest The National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses, the total RN population has increased at every 4-year interval in which the survey has been taken since 1980. Although the total RN population increased from 2,696,540 in 2000 to 2,909,357 in 2004, this increase (7.9%) was comparatively low considering growth between earlier report intervals (i.e. the RN population grew 14.2% between 1992 and 1996). In 2004, an estimated 83.2% of RNs were employed in nursing.
Changing demographics signal a need for more nurses to care for our aging population.
Insufficient staffing is raising the stress level of nurses, impacting job satisfaction, and driving many nurses to leave the profession.
High nurse turnover and vacancy rates are affecting access to health care.
In July 2007, a report released by the PricewaterhouseCoopers' Health Research Institute found that though the average nurse turnover rate in hospitals was 8.4%, the average voluntary turnover for first-year nurses was 27.1%. This report is titled What Works: Healing the Healthcare Staffing Shortage.
Impact of Nurse Staffing on Patient Care
Many recent studies point to the connection between adequate levels of registered nurse staffing and safe patient care.
In an article published in the September/October 2005 issue of Nursing Economic$, Dr. Peter Buerhaus and associates found that the majority of RNs (79%) and Chief Nursing Officers (68%) believe the nursing shortage is affecting the overall quality of patient care in hospitals and other settings, including long-term care facilities, ambulatory care settings, and student health centers. Most hospital RNs (93%) report major problems with having enough time to maintain patient safety, detect complications early, and collaborate with other team members.
In Health Care at the Crossroads: Strategies for Addressing the Evolving Nursing Crisis, a report released in August 2002 by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO), the authors found that a shortage of nurses in America's hospitals is putting patient lives in danger. JCAHO examined 1609 hospital reports of patient deaths and injuries since 1996 and found that low nursing staff levels were a contributing factor in 24% of the cases.
Strategies to Address the Nursing Shortage
Last Update: September 29, 2008
CONTACT: Robert Rosseter
(202) 463-6930, x231
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About madwife2002, BSN, RN
RN with 26 years of experience many of those years spent in dialysis. I have worked in acute care, home, ICHD as a CN, FA, and currently a director.
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