|
Why a career in Nursing?
The world is facing a nurses shortage and that means
careers will be
available for all those who want to work. Both men and women can
avail them selves of this opportunity by training at their own pace
using our material. Whether they will use their training for work
at home, or for travel to other countries, the nursing career will open
new doors for them. The following is an excerpt from an article in
Wikipedia that explains the shortage, the consequences and the
opportunity for a great paying career at home or in a foreign country,
using an American accredited certification.
Nursing shortage refers
to a situation where the demand for nurses is greater than the supply,
as is currently the case in the United States and several other
developed nations.
The amount of nursing responsibilities has increased
and the patients are more ill than before. In addition, the average age
of nurses increases while the number of applications to baccalaureate
programs has decreased.[1] Furthermore, new opportunities
became available for the nursing practice, which further drains the
number of nurses available for the acute care settings.[2]
Other factors that affect the nursing shortage are aging workforce,
problems with retention, and difficulty recruiting young people into the
field. [3]
Job satisfaction
Studies have shown that the nursing shortage is an
issue in developed countries today. Students need now apply to schools
to become nurses because admission rates have increased. Several studies
have been done to understand how nurses feel about their career. About 5
years ago, sociologist Bryan Turner initially identified nurses’ most
important complaints as subordination to the medical profession as well
as over regulation, and difficult working conditions. Also, a report
from the Commonwealth of Australia identified some of the
dissatisfaction as stemming from frequent schedule changes, overloads,
shift work, lack of appreciation by superiors and colleagues, as well as
lack of childcare. Inadequate pay was identified as a lesser problem
based on the report. Later, a study revealed that the dissatisfaction
among nurses focused on conflicting expectations from nurses and
managers due to regulation of cost, lack of opportunity to provide
comprehensive nursing care, and disillusioned workforce or “loss of
confidence in, and frustration with, the healthcare system.” Limitations
to comprehensive care were identified because nurses are overloaded with
the number of assigned patients, massive paperwork for billing purposes,
and short staffing to cut cost.[4] In the past 20 years
administrative/government policies and practice has changed very little,
cost-cutting is still the priority, patient loads uncontrolled, and
nurses are rarely consulted when recommending changes. [5]
The major reason why nurses plan to leave the field, as stated by the
First Consulting Group, is because of the working conditions. [3]
With the high turnover rate, the nursing field does not have a chance to
build up the already frustrated staff. Aside from the deteriorating
working conditions, the real problem is “nursing’s failure to be
attractive to the younger generation.” There’s a decline in interest
among college students to consider nursing as a probable career. More
than half of currently working nurses “would not recommend nursing to
their own children” and a little less than a quarter would advise others
to avoid this as a profession altogether. [6]
Nursing shortage impact
Nursing shortage has the following effects: [3]
- Increase nurses’ patient’s
loads
- Increases the risk for error
- Increase risk of spreading
infection to patients and staffs
- Increase risk for occupational
injury
- Increased deaths
- Increase in nursing turnover
- Increase perception of unsafe
working conditions, contributing to increase shortage, and hindering
local or national recruitment efforts
- Increase the nurses chance of
getting psychiatric help because of massive amounts of stress
The negative impact mentioned above intensifies with
the nursing shortage in developing countries due to recruitment to work
abroad to wealthier countries. [7] For example, nurses from
the Philippines and Africa are recruited to work for the United States
and Europe.
Patching up the shortage
Nursing shortages can be consistent or intermittent
depending on the current number of patient needing medical attention. In
order to respond to this fluctuating census, health care industries have
utilized float pool nurses and agency nurses. Float pool nurses are
nursing staffs employed by the hospital to work in any unit within the
organization. Agency nurses are employed by an independent staffing
organization and have the opportunity to work in any hospitals on a
daily, weekly or contractual basis. Similar to other professionals, both
types of nurses can only work within their licensed scope of practice,
training, and certification.
Float pool nurses and agency nurses, as mentioned by
First Consulting group, are currently used in response to the current
shortage. Use of the said services increases the cost of healthcare,
decreases specialty, and decreases the interest in long-term solutions
to the shortage. On the other hand, international recruitment gives rise
to concerns on clinical competencies, cultural sensitivity, and ethics
in global recruitment. [3] Foreign-trained recruitment has
been touted as a "stop-gap", but is by no means a solution. In the
United States nurses from Philippines, India, South Korea and China have
been seen as prime recruiting grounds. However, the past several years
have seen some unintended consequences of this aggressive recruitment,
e.g., the 2006 nurse test selling scandal that was reported in the
Philippines[8]
A growing response to the nursing shortage is the
advent of travel nursing a specialized sub-set of the staffing agency
industry that has evolved to serve the needs of hospitals affected by
the increasing nursing shortage. According to the Professional
Association of Nurse Travelers, there are an estimated 25,500 Registered
Nurse Travelers working in the U.S. The number of LVN/LPN Nurse Travelers
is not known.
Retention and recruitment
Retention and recruitment are important responses to
a long-term solution to the nursing shortage. Some of the reasons that
contribute to retention of nursing in the healthcare field are addressed
in different levels and are as follows. In spite of the discontent,
nurses continue to practice. Also, there is a co-relation of high job
satisfaction and significant education activities among nurses.[4]
Other possible solutions is through incentives and funding coupled with
employer and hospital regulatory approach to retain the current number
of staff and could help avoid aggravating turnover. [3] To
assist the healthcare field, congress annually approves a budget for the
year through the Nurse Reinvestment Act passed in 2002. Previously in
2004 and 2005, 141.9 million and 205 million were approved in each
fiscal year, respectively. The funding is distributed to advance nursing
education, scholarships, grants, diversity programs, loan repayment
programs, nursing faculty programs, and comprehensive geriatric
education. [9] Efforts of some states to address the nursing
shortage in United States focused on the nursing working conditions.
Currently, mandatory overtime for nurses is prohibited in nine states,
hospital accountability to implement valid staffing plans in seven
states, and only one state implement the minimum staffing ratio.
[3]
In terms of recruitment, suggestions were made in order make nursing
attractive as a profession. One of these suggestions was presenting
Nursing as a unique discipline, making it an attractive field for the
young people. [5] As mentioned in retention, incentives and
funding to recruitment effort can contribute to the solution. [3]
Many hospitals believe retention is more important than recruitment.
They feel that if you treat an employee well, they will be your best
recruiters. Word of mouth goes far.
Market philosophy and
Impacts on healthcare
Australian nursing researchers, John Buchanan and
Gillian Considine described hospitals as “being run like a business”
with “issues of patient care… of secondary importance.” [4]
Emotional support, education, encouragement and counseling are integral
to the everyday nursing practice. However, these practices are not
easily quantified and considered by managers as unjustified cost for the
patients, who are also viewed as consumers. [4] Therefore,
only clinical responsibilities, such as medication administration,
dressing changes, foley catheter insertions, and anything that involves
tangible supplies, are quantified and incorporated into the
organizational budget and plan of care for the consumers.
US nursing shortage
The US population is projected to grow at least 18%
over two decades in the 21st century, while the population of those
sixty-five and older is expected to increase three times that rate.
[7] The current shortfall of nurses is projected at over 1 million
by the year 2020. [7]
Professional and related occupations are expected to rapidly increase
between years 2000 – 2012. The demand for healthcare practitioners and
technical occupations will increase and projected to have 1.7 million
job openings with in this time period. In this group, the demand for
registered nurses is the highest. Registered nurses are predicted to
have a total of 1,101 openings due to growth during this 10 year period.
[10] In a 2001 American Hospital Association survey, 715
hospitals reported that 126,000 nursing positions were unfilled.
[11]
However, other research findings report a projection of opposite trend.
Although the demand for nurses continues to increase, the rate of
employment has slowed down since 1994 because hospitals were
incorporating more less-skilled nursing personnel to substitute for
nurses. [12] With the decrease in employment, the earnings
for nurses also decreased. Wage among nurses leveled as it relates to
inflation between 1990 and 1994. [12]
Comparing the data released by the Bureau of Health Professions, the
projections of shortage in within two years have increased.
|
Year |
Supply |
Demand |
Shortage |
Percent |
|
2000 |
1,889,243 |
1,999,950 |
-110,707 |
-6% |
|
2005 |
2,012,444 |
2,161,831 |
-149,387 |
-7% |
|
2010 |
2,069,369 |
2,344,584 |
-275,215 |
-12% |
|
2015 |
2,055,491 |
2,562,554 |
-507,063 |
-20% |
|
2020 |
2,001,998 |
2,810,414 |
-808,416 |
-28.8% |
US: Supply versus Demand Projections for FTE Registered
Nurses
Source: Data
from the Bureau of Health Professions (2002)[13]
|
Year |
Supply |
Demand |
Shortage |
Percent |
|
2000 |
1,890,700 |
2,001,500 |
-110,800 |
-6% |
|
2005 |
1,942,500 |
2,161,300 |
-218,800 |
-10% |
|
2010 |
1,941,200 |
2,347,000 |
-405,800 |
-17% |
|
2015 |
1,886,100 |
2,569,800 |
-683,700 |
-27% |
|
2020 |
1,808,000 |
2,824,900 |
-1,016,900 |
-36% |
US: Supply versus Demand Projections for FTE Registered
Nurses
Source: Data
from the Bureau of Health Professions. (2004).[1]
Global shortage and
recruitment
The nursing shortage is in global scale according to
the International Council of Nurses: Netherlands needed to fill 7000
nursing positions in year 2002, England needs to fill 22,000 positions
in year 2000, and Canada will need about 10,000 nursing graduates by
year 2011. [11] In the United States, recruiting foreign
nurses has been practiced for 50 years. Philippines supplied most of its
nurses to the United States and other countries. Overall, the total
number of foreign graduate nurses continues to increase to 14% between
1998 and 2003. [7]
U.S. healthcare facilities pushes to “ease restrictions” on the
immigration law to increase the number of recruited foreign nurses. On
the other hand, this recruitment practice is only a temporary solution
and does not fully address the nursing shortage as mentioned by American
Nursing Association (ANA). [11]
|
Country |
Number of Nurses |
Density per 1000
population |
Year |
|
Canada |
309576 |
9.95 |
2003 |
|
China |
1358000 |
1.05 |
2001 |
|
India |
865135 |
0.80 |
2004 |
|
Japan |
993628 |
7.79 |
2002 |
|
New Zealand |
31128 |
8.16 |
2001 |
|
Nigeria |
210306 |
0.28 |
2003 |
|
Philippines |
127595 |
1.69 |
2000 |
|
United Kingdom |
704332 |
12.12 |
1997 |
|
United States of America |
2669603 |
9.37 |
2000 |
|
Zimbabwe |
9357 |
0.72 |
2004 |
Source: Data from the World Health Organization (2006).[14]
Impact of global
recruitment
Countries that send their nurses abroad experience a
shortage and strain their own healthcare system. In South Africa,
accelerated recruitment by developed countries such as United States,
United Kingdom and Australia is putting more strain in the healthcare
system due to prevalence of diseases, such as AIDS, and limited
resources. [7] Similar to the U.S., nurses who leave the
organization are a financial disadvantage due to the need to fund
recruiting and retraining of new nurses into the system. Also, every
nurse that leaves the country in South Africa is an annual loss of
$184,000[7], related to the financial and economical impact
of the nursing shortage. The following table represents the number of
nurses per 100,000-population in South African Countries. [7]
|
Number of South
African Countries |
Number of nurses
per 100,000 population |
|
16 |
100 |
|
10 |
50 |
|
9 |
20 |
|
3 |
Less than 10 |
In addition, physicians in the Philippines have
shifted to the nursing field for export opportunities. [7]
In an American Hospital Association study, the cost
to replace one nurse in the U. S. was estimated at around $30,000 -
$64,000. [3] This amount is likely related to the cost of
recruiting and training nurses into the organization. Hiring foreign
nurses is more financially taxing compared to hiring domestic-graduate
nurses; however, facilities save money in a long run because foreign
nurses have a contractual obligation to complete their term. [7]
References
-
^
a b Bureau of Health
Professions. (2004). What is Behind HRSA's Projected Supply, Demand,
and Shortage of Registered Nurses. [Online]. Retrieved November 24,
2006 from the World Wide Web.
- ^
Gale Encyclopedia of Nursing and Allied Health. (2006). Gale virtual
reference library. [Online]. Retrieved October 19, 2006 from
University of Washington Libraries.
- ^
a b c
d e f
g h Stone, P. W.,
Clarke S., Cimiotti J., & Correa-de-Araujo R. (2004). Nurses'
working conditions: implications for infectious disease. [Electronic
Version]. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 10(11), 1984-9. Retrieved
October 12, 2006 from Pubmed (15550212).
- ^
a b c
d Forsyth, S. & McKenzie, H. (2006). A
comparative analysis of contemporary nurses' discontents.
[Electronic Version]. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 56(2), 209-216.
Retrieved October 25, 2006 from Blackwell Synergy (doi:
10.1111/j.1365-2648.2006.03999).
- ^
a b Mitchell, G. J.
(2003). Nursing shortage or nursing famine: Looking beyond numbers?
[Electronic Version]. Nursing Science Quarterly, 16(3), 219-24.
Retrieved October 12, 2006 from Pubmed (12876879).
- ^
Wieck, K. L. (2003). Faculty for the millennium: changes needed to
attract the emerging workforce into nursing. [Electronic Version].
Journal of Nursing Education, 42(4), 151-8. Retrieved October 25,
2006 from Pubmed (12710805).
- ^
a b c
d e f
g h i
Brush, B. L., Sochalski, J., & Berger, A. M. (2004). Imported care:
Recruiting
foreign nurses to U.S. health care facilities. [Electronic Version].
Health Affairs, 23(3), 78-87. Retrieved October 26, 2006 from
http://content.healthaffairs.org.offcampus.lib.washington.edu/cgi/content/full/23/3/78?ijkey=82040093f179b956b3b2d1769736a1c23040fad0.
- ^
A Breech of Integrity,Clavreul RN, Ph.D, Geneviève M., Working Nurse
Magazine, Nov. 20, 2006
- ^
Beu, B. (2004). The nursing shortage and the nurse reinvestment act.
[Online]. AORN Journal, 79(5), 1061-1063. Retrieved June 5, 2005
from Proquest database (639206991).
- ^
Hecker, D.E. (2004). Occupational Employment Projections to 2012.
[Electronic Version]. Monthly Labor Review (pp. 80–105). Retrieved
October 25, 2006 from
http://www.bls.gov.offcampus.lib.washington.edu/opub/mlr/2004/02/art5full.pdf.
- ^
a b c
Trossman, S. (2002). The global reach of the nursing shortage: The
ANA questions the ethics of luring foreign-educated nurses to the
United States. [Electronic Version]. American Journal of Nursing,
102(3), 85 – 87. Retrieved October 11, 2006, from Ovid database.
-
^
a b Buerhaus, P. I. &
Staiger, D. O. (1999). Trouble in the nursing labor market? Recent
trends and future outlook. [Electronic Version]. Health affairs, 18,
214-222. Retrieved October 26, 2006 from
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~dstaiger/Papers/healthaffp214.pdf.
- ^
Bureau of Health Professions. (2002). Projected Supply, Demand, and
Shortages of Registered Nurses: 2000-2020. [Online]. Retrieved June
5, 2005 from the World Wide Web.
|