Old Timer's Take on Fixing the Nursing Shortage

The nursing shortage has been exacerbated and accelerated by the Pandemic, no doubt about that. We need to replace those who have left and educate them even more to fill that gap. I am a firm believer in the "old way" of training, with additional post-training academics. Nurses General Nursing Article

Updated:   Published

The nursing shortage is starting to hurt, really bad.  These past few years have worn down some of the strongest and most talented nurses in the US, and they have either quit nursing or moved to greener Nursing pastures.  Sadly, this happened smack in the middle of a horrible pandemic when they were needed the most. 

Reasons for Nurses Leaving 

  1. Exhaustion
  2. Timely or early retirement        
  3. Refusing to get a mandatory COVID vaccine
  4. Going to travel nursing for better pay
  5. Family concerns during COVID
  6. Safer easier assignments elsewhere
  7. Sickness or death
  8. Pursuit of higher education
  9. Violence on the job, or 
  10. They were just plain sick of it. Burned out, PTSD, emotionally drained

Too many of them were all wrung out. They didn't have anything left to give. Nurses are human too.

An article in the Bangor Daily News before the pandemic discussed nurse retainment.  One hospital spokesperson stated that over half of new graduates left their new jobs before their first year was up.  They started replacing nurses with foreign nurses.  I wonder what they discussed in their exit interviews.  Did they ask WHY they left?  If they asked, what were the answers?  That was not covered in the newspaper story.  It made me wonder what they were doing to address the reasons that new nurses left.

Could it be that they were not staffed well enough?  Were they given a long enough training period with a preceptor?  Was the pay good?  Were they treated with respect and taught the ropes with patience?

I don't pretend to have all the answers, but I am an old nurse, and I have learned a thing or two.  Every patient is different, and so is every nurse.

kathy-graduation.jpg.c7ed0572c38b5436f057cec9784af746.jpg.704bce56fc6a7c766a153f732b58db0e.jpg

When I trained in nursing in 1967 (graduated in 1970), we started practicing our book learning in the second half of our first year.  I trained in a School of Nursing.  It was a 3-year program in a Catholic Hospital school, with rules, lots of rules, and very few vacation breaks.  We went to school and trained year-round.  Our fees covered books, room, board, schooling, and uniform laundering. If my memory serves me well the cost of our program for 3 years, all year, was around $1500...  I had a federal loan that was partially forgiven by my work after graduating.  A nursing student couldn't pay for books for that amount these days.  I paid the balance of my loan, around $800 several years after I graduated.  I was never strapped with student debt and exorbitant monthly payments.

Our first semester gave us all the necessary sciences.  The second semester we dove right into actual nursing fundamentals, and beyond that, we learned pharmacology and practiced in all of the specialties.  With the supervision of our instructor, we did all of the work of an RN.  We passed meds, and took full patient assignments.  We work/studied OBS/GYN, Med/Surg, psychiatric nursing, Operating room and recovery, pediatrics, and ICU.  We spent a good slug of time (generally a month or more) in each specialty and did our studies and hands-on practice simultaneously at times.   We also worked shift work with regular staff and in our senior year, we did Charge Nurse duty (all with instructor supervision). 

During our training, no cheating was allowed and we were monitored for it.   If you failed a subject, no matter how hard you worked, you were dismissed and had to repeat that entire year.  I always thought that was harsh, and that perhaps some tutoring might have been fairer.

My program was very tough.  I was never so proud or relieved as the day I graduated from that school. When I left, I felt like I had the world by the tail and I was a fully prepared nurse.  I passed my boards with flying colors on the first attempt. And, that was while I was sick with a horrid sore throat and fever!

I sincerely believe that an attempt to "get back to basics" is the way to go.  I admire and know many college-educated newer nurses.  I also know that they did not start their first jobs with the same confidence that my classmates and I did.  We were very confident in our skills because of hands-on training.

A 4-year program is fine, if you want to be a well academically rounded new nurse who will need a lot of nurse training once you start your first job as an RN.   Since there are barely enough nurses to go around, is that realistic...to have that expectation of your new employer?  Can an already overloaded staff nurse mentor you and still take safe good care of her own patients?

My idea is this:  

Go back to the old training, and know that once a student graduates, they are prepared to do the job of a bedside RN from the get-go.  Offer these programs free, to anyone who qualifies and find a way to do a lot of the coursework remotely, so a student can do much of their training while at home. Set up satellite classrooms remote from the nursing school.  Organize housing for students when they need to be away from home for in-hospital nursing training.  Also, attract them with the promise of an excellent position and salary and potential for advancement when they graduate.  Employers can then offer tuition reimbursement for nurses who want to work for them while they pursue higher education, like a BSN, MS or PhD.  While they continue their nursing education, they can be an already "trained" RN, earning a living in a hospital or LTC. We also need nurse educators, so additional education is necessary for that as well.  I know that some of "my" ideas are not original and that some facilities and schools offer a lot of what I suggest.  But this has to be widespread and the commonly accepted approach to nursing recruitment, education and retainment.  If schools and facilities and other nurses do not make nursing attractive, we will not get new nurses. 

The work of an RN should be based on caring, curing, rehabilitating (when possible), educating and prevention.  Another very important part of nursing is guiding patients and their families through their last days.  None of these things can be done in a hurry, yet every time a nurse goes to work at the bedside, whatever facility they work in, they face a rapid-fire marathon of work.  There is little or no time for actual caring....a little hand-holding, a compassionate conversation with a patient or family member,  an extra touch,  maybe even a little skincare. And, the nurses' basic needs like using the bathroom or having lunch are often not met.  That is just not right.  The job is just that...a job. We want it to be a calling again.

Nothing has highlighted the short fallings more than the care of Covid patients during an overwhelming pandemic.   We can't allow this to continue.  Nursing is not the same as a production line, yet nurses are expected to work that way.  It is evident by the long-standing understaffing of facilities where physical and mental speed is a constant expectation...and slowing down for caring and compassion is not. Profits are the ruling factor in healthcare facilities and that is just counterintuitive to the calling.

We will never attract young people to nursing if we allow the current pace and disrespect of nursing to stand.  There are just too many other attractive professional opportunities that compete with nursing.  But we can change.  We can change how or if we have to pay for nursing education.  We can change nursing education itself....by starting with "training" and continuing with broader advanced education. Perhaps even earlier nurses training prep can start in high school   We can change the work of nurses.  Most importantly, we can change the quality of the work and patient care and safety if all of these steps are taken.

 I don't have a miraculous way to pay for all of this, but we need to find a way. If not, then people like me, a 73-year-old woman, will be hard put to find nursing care for ourselves when we need it.

Specializes in Med-Surg, NICU.
4 hours ago, Tweety said:

We were mandated 12 hour shifts years ago and a few people left then that couldn't fit it in with their family's schedule, but 12 hour shifts and 4 days off are wildly popular and if they brought them back my guess is that not many people would take them up on it.  Personally, I'd rather get the torture done in 3 days. LOL

Thank you!

I swear, anyone who thinks that going back to 8 hours is the solution is out of touch with not only today's working conditions,  but also the newer generation. As a whole, Gen Y and Z are not abou living to work, nor do we think that working so many hours and putting work above all else is a flex. We want work life balance and for most of us, having double the days off is the most efficient way to achieve that goal.

Specializes in Patient Safety Advocate; HAI Prevention.

Let's all agree, that some prefer 5 8 hour shifts and some prefer 3 12 hour shifts.  And hospitals have to learn to accommodate all of them.  That was the point of my article...Promise Nurses the Moon and Give it to them.  It's time that nurses decide what is best for them, not hospitals...because we all can agree that hospitals only worry about the $$$$.  (at least most of them do)   And there are nurses on both sides of this issue that think that their favored length of shift is better for patients...   No need to get nasty with each other....that is exactly what hospitals want!  Divide and conquer!

Specializes in oncology.
On 5/22/2022 at 1:55 PM, ThePrincessBride said:

Tone down your condescension. You will win more with honey than vinegar.

as you evidenced by

On 5/22/2022 at 1:55 PM, ThePrincessBride said:

I think you are delusional.

On 5/22/2022 at 1:55 PM, ThePrincessBride said:

We even have some old-timers

On 5/22/2022 at 1:58 PM, ThePrincessBride said:

A MODERN DAY nurse living in the PRESENT

On 5/22/2022 at 1:55 PM, ThePrincessBride said:

Social workers and case managers perform much of discharge planning and coordination. 

Better tell the NCLEX writers this.....

Specializes in OR, Nursing Professional Development.
5 hours ago, ThePrincessBride said:

I think you also need to speak to today's nurses before asserting that we need to go back to 8s.

You may actually be surprised at what some of today's younger nurses are interested in. My unit offers a variety of 8, 10, and 12 hour shifts. The most popular are actually the 8 hour shifts. Granted, it's a procedural area that while it runs 24/7, does run only 21 ORs after 3pm.

There is evidence out there that supports creative solutions. A combination of shift lengths, including "parent shifts" that may only be 6 hours and give parents time to get kids off to school/day care and picked up from school/day care.

A blanket statement that we need 8s or we need 12s is not realistic going forward. Creativity to attract the nurses who can be brought on with something that makes them happy is what is needed.

Specializes in Med-Surg, NICU.
35 minutes ago, Rose_Queen said:

You may actually be surprised at what some of today's younger nurses are interested in. My unit offers a variety of 8, 10, and 12 hour shifts. The most popular are actually the 8 hour shifts. Granted, it's a procedural area that while it runs 24/7, does run only 21 ORs after 3pm.

There is evidence out there that supports creative solutions. A combination of shift lengths, including "parent shifts" that may only be 6 hours and give parents time to get kids off to school/day care and picked up from school/day care.

A blanket statement that we need 8s or we need 12s is not realistic going forward. Creativity to attract the nurses who can be brought on with something that makes them happy is what is needed.

Yeah, I am talking acute care, bedside. Not procedural. I know a ton of nurses who enjoy 8 hours in the outpatient/non-bedside nursing. But 8 hours at the bedside? Hell no. 

Most acute care bedside nurses do NOT want to be there 8 hours a day, 5 days per weel.

Specializes in Med-Surg, NICU.
2 hours ago, KathyDay said:

Let's all agree, that some prefer 5 8 hour shifts and some prefer 3 12 hour shifts.  And hospitals have to learn to accommodate all of them.  That was the point of my article...Promise Nurses the Moon and Give it to them.  It's time that nurses decide what is best for them, not hospitals...because we all can agree that hospitals only worry about the $$$$.  (at least most of them do)   And there are nurses on both sides of this issue that think that their favored length of shift is better for patients...   No need to get nasty with each other....that is exactly what hospitals want!  Divide and conquer!

I apologize. I just don't handle *** condescending attitudes too well and I will stop replying to the pot stirrer.

Wonderful article for sure!! As an adult who went to nursing school as a second career, my clinical experiences were shocking. I quickly decided the inpatient setting wouldn't be a good fit for me. Spending 40+ hours a week in an unsupportive environment with passive aggressive coworkers (while being solely responsible for patients' lives) was not for me.

BTW... oversight of staff competencies and training is virtually non-existent in the outpatient setting. If those skills are not learned in school, you have to seek out independent education to ensure your own competence.

Specializes in Med nurse in med-surg., float, HH, and PDN.

AMEN!

Now if only administration would understand this! But they are in business, and don't seem to have much of a clue.

When I was in training we trained HOW to do procedures, and yes, the reasons for those procedures, but the HOW was what gave me the confidence when I got my first nursing job. It wasn't a "calling" and I did not have a "dream job" in mind. I liked taking care of people, human beings who need to be acknowledged as such, not  a room # or a Diagnosis. I viewed it as practicing The Golden Rule. 

I was fortunate to be trained in the old days (I am also in my early 70's) and I really loved my work, because we had a range of people working: CNA's (now called techs?), LPN's, and RN's. The assignments were reasonably balanced, and there was a certain routine for each shift. I also think 8 hour shifts are more sensible than 12 hour shifts.

Now I am retired, and I feel satisfied by the experiences I had as a nurse. We weren't "slammed" with work, and if things got hectic, there was a way to assist, help, reschedule on-the-spot, because personnel were willing and able to be flexible, not tightly wrapped in a personal, unending work-hell .

So they can:

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Go back to the old training, and know that once a student graduates, they are prepared to do the job of a bedside RN from the get-go.  Offer these programs free, to anyone who qualifies and find a way to do a lot of the coursework remotely, so a student can do much of their training while at home. Set up satellite classrooms remote from the nursing school.  Organize housing for students when they need to be away from home for in-hospital nursing training.  Also, attract them with the promise of an excellent position and salary and potential for advancement when they graduate.  Employers can then offer tuition reimbursement for nurses

Or they can hire well trained  nurses from overseas who will take a lower salary and questionable working conditions due to their wish to make it in this country.

I'm too cynical. I think Employers/Government will go with option number two.

But a nugget of hope in my heart wishes your idea could be the reality.

Specializes in Case Management (CCM), Hospice, Psychiatric, OB.

 I was a candy striper in my senior year in high school. We went to school in the mornings and to work at the hospital in the afternoons. Ten years and two children later I went to an ADN program which required quite a commute. I thought the method of teaching was excellent. We were taught the anatomy and physiology, related diseases/conditions and the treatments including lab tests, diet and other diagnostics at the same time. How can anyone take A&P a year or two before going to nursing school remember and apply any of it? The first year was 3 days in class and 2 days in the hospital. The second year 3 days in the hospital and 2 days in class enabling us to get a lot of practical experience such as starting IVs, catheters etc.  It was rare if anyone failed the state boards which at that time was writing 5 tests over a 2 day period.

Specializes in oncology.
Quote

Go back to the old training, and know that once a student graduates, they are prepared to do the job of a bedside RN from the get-go.  Offer these programs free, to anyone who qualifies

Years ago, we did get a grant for free tuition for students. We ended up with a 50% completion rate. May be students need to have a little "skin in the game"? I don't know but the grant was not renewed. 

?Pass the uniform test. If nurses nowadays had to wear the hat  stockings shoes and dresses would we still be up for the challenge. Just kidding..LOL

it’s definitely the ratios but it’s also the acuity.

Another significant factor are the patients.  A lot of ignored or missed mental health issues are mainstream and mistaken and/ or treated as medical. So then we begin the revolving door of patient dissatisfaction and sometimes nurse abuse.

I could continue but this article was written exceptionally , thank you! ?