Running head: INADEQUATE EDUCATION AND NURSING SHORTAGE 1

Similar documents
Worsening Shortages and Growing Consequences: CNO Survey on Nurse Supply and Demand

Text-based Document. AACN Standards for Healthy Work Environments: After More Than a Decade, Where Are We Now? Barden, Connie; Cassidy, Linda

Nurse-to-Patient Ratios

Global Health Workforce Crisis. Key messages

Helping LeadingAge Members Address Workforce Challenges

Current policy context of safe staffing in A&E Departments

Medical Laboratory Science Workforce Shortage. Michelle Butina, PhD, MLS(ASCP) CM Frances J Feltner, DNP, MSN, RN, FAAN Melissa Slone, MSW

Overview of the Long-Term Care Health Workforce in Colorado

REGON S SNURSEFACULTY: FACULTYOREGON SNURS OREGON SNURSEFACULT ON SNURSEFACULTY OR TYOREGON SNURSEFAC EGON SNURSEFACULTY WHY ARE THEY LEAVING?

Pharmacy Management. 450 Pharmacy Management Positions

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA

Developing a Plan for a Sustainable Workforce. Prof James Buchan [also WHO CC, UTS]

THE QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE EFFECTS OF PATIENT CENTERED MEDICAL HOME IN THE VETERANS HEALTH ADMINISTRATION

Dorothy I. Height and Whitney M. Young, Jr. Social Work Reinvestment Act H.R. 795 Talking Points


Nunavut Nursing Recruitment and Retention Strategy November 06, 2007

CRRT Nursing Issues and Trends 2005

The Safe Staffing for Quality Care Act will have a profound impact on the Advanced

Are You Undermining Your Patient Experience Strategy?

Survey of Nurse Employers in California 2014

Implementation of Telepharmacy in Rural Hospitals: Potential for Improving Medication Safety

Ageing, Chronic Disease and Long- Term Care

Running head: NURSING SHORTAGE 1

National Association of Social Workers/Texas Chapter Policy Priorities Reimbursement/Compensation for Social Workers

Long Term Care Nurses Feelings on Communication, Teamwork and Stress in Long Term Care

Workplace Advocacy

Targeted Solutions Tools


RURAL RECRUITMENT PLAYBOOK OUTLINE

Draft Budget Royal College of Nursing Scotland

Health Foundation submission: Health Select Committee inquiry on nursing workforce

RADIATION THERAPISTS

Florida Post-Licensure Registered Nurse Education: Academic Year

2017 ARIZONA LEADERS IN BUSINESS SURVEY

The Evolving Practice of Nursing Pamela S. Dickerson, PhD, RN-BC. PRN Continuing Education January-March, 2011

THE SETTING is a 561-bed

Priority programmes and rural retention the example of TB. Karin Bergstrom Stop TB Department WHO, Geneva

Where We Are Now. Three Key Areas for Investment

STATEMENT OF SHURHONDA Y

Chicago Scholarship Online Abstract and Keywords. U.S. Engineering in the Global Economy Richard B. Freeman and Hal Salzman

2012 SURVEY OF REGISTERED NURSES AMN HEALTHCARE, INC., 2012 JOB SATISFACTION, CAREER PATTERNS AND TRAJECTORIES

Looking Forward: Health Education Priorities for America

How can the township health system be strengthened in Myanmar?

Navigating an Enhanced Rural Health Model for Maryland

Marketing. Pharmaceutical Industry: Marketing Positions 445

Future of Nursing: Campaign for Action

Media Kit. August 2016

School of Nursing Philosophy (AASN/BSN/MSN/DNP)

The Cancer Workforce: Crossing the Continuum of Disease and Care

Positive Behavioural Support; Panacea or the new problem?

THE SCIENCE THE ART THE LEADER WITHIN. Nurse Manager Competencies

Rural Health Clinics

The Advanced Nursing Practice Role of Nurse Administrators. By: Angie Madden NUR 7001 Wright State University College of Nursing and Health

"Nurse Staffing" Introduction Nurse Staffing and Patient Outcomes

FULL TEAM AHEAD: UNDERSTANDING THE UK NON-SURGICAL CANCER TREATMENTS WORKFORCE

Identify the Causes of Absenteeism in Nurses Mayo Hospital Lahore Pakistan

Full-time Equivalents and Financial Costs Associated with Absenteeism, Overtime, and Involuntary Part-time Employment in the Nursing Profession

4/15/2018. Disclosure of Commercial Interests. Reducing Staff Vacancy in Senior Care Organizations

Evaluation Framework to Determine the Impact of Nursing Staff Mix Decisions

ECONOMIC EVALUATION OF PALLIATIVE CARE IN IRELAND

Relationship between Organizational Climate and Nurses Job Satisfaction in Bangladesh

South Carolina Nursing Education Programs August, 2015 July 2016

The Coalition of Geriatric Nursing Organizations

Background: As described below, 70 years of RN effectiveness makes it clear that RNs are central to a high-performing health system.

1-C FIRST. Reengaging Mature Nurses: The Impact of a Caring Based Intervention

Time to Care Securing a future for the hospital workforce in Europe - Spotlight on Ireland. Low resolution

VISIONSERIES. Graduate Preparation for Academic Nurse Educators. A Living Document from the National League for Nursing TRANSFORMING NURSING EDUCATION

2017 Louisiana Nursing Education Capacity Report and 2016 Nurse Supply Addendum Report

Perception Gap on New Graduates Practice-Readiness Narrows Between Nurse Hiring Managers and Clinical Educators

Master of Health Administration (MHA) with a specialization in. Health Care Operations

7/02 New Hampshire Nursing Workforce Initiative Executive Summary Report

Female Nurses and Midwives Shortage in Jordan: A Policy Analysis. Abdulqadir J. Nashwan, MSN, RN. The Hashemite University.

SUBJECT: Medical Staffing Update Report 1. PURPOSE

Job Stress Related to Job Satisfaction of Nurses. Allison Peters. University of Central Florida

Chapter: Chapter 1: Exploring the Growth of Nursing as a Profession

Sustaining Fall Prevention Practices at Your Hospital

An overview of the challenges facing care homes in the UK

Prelicensure nursing program approval is defined as the official

Partnership for Fair Caregiver Wages

Water, sanitation and hygiene in health care facilities in Asia and the Pacific

Improving Patient Safety by Decreasing Communication Barriers to Care- Tips, Tools & Techniques

180 Feedback Results for Sample Nurse Leader

Workplace Violence: Nurse Safety Issue Analysis. Rachel Fox & Abby Densmore

Nurse Staffing Approach in Wales

Better at Home. 3 Ways to Improve Home and Community Care in Ontario. Recommendations to meet the changing needs of clients

The tough economy has meant leaner budgets and fewer OR staff vacancies

Wisconsin s Health Care Workforce Report 2008

Building a Magnetic Environment

MEASURING THE JOB STICKINESS OF COMMUNITY NURSES IN ONTARIO ( ): Implications for Policy & Practice

UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI I SYSTEM TESTIMONY

KRISP Project L. Michele Issel, PhD, RN Univ of Illinois at Chicago College of Nursing & School of Public

Nursing essay example

Undergraduate Nursing Students' Perceptions of Preparedness as They Prepare to Graduate

Mandated Nurse Staffing Levels Literature Review

2017 nursing trends and salary survey results: PART 1

Florida s Workforce Supply Characteristics and Trends: Registered Nurses (RN)

Training Competent Health Professionals for the 20th Century Response National Department of Health

MEDICAL PROFESSIONALISM (Update 2005)

Q Manpower. Employment Outlook Survey New Zealand. A Manpower Research Report

Emergency admissions to hospital: managing the demand

Transcription:

Running head: INADEQUATE EDUCATION AND NURSING SHORTAGE 1 Inadequate Education as a Reason of Nursing Shortage Name Institution

INADEQUATE EDUCATION AND NURSING SHORTAGE 2 Inadequate Education as a Reason of Nursing Shortage According to Chan, Tam, Lung, Wong, and Chau (2012), nursing shortage has been a growing problem in the United States since the 1930s, when the increased hospital attendance was observed. The authors explain that nursing shortage prompts some hospitals to reduce the number of beds or hire temporary nurses, which is expensive and leads to provision of less optimal care to the patients. The issue is not as much caused by the lack of nursing students as by the fact that the existing nurses are not interested or motivated enough to educate new generations of nursing specialists. Although more students enrol in nursing schools, faculty shortage remains a significant problem (The Essentials of Baccalaureate Education for Professional Nursing Practice, 2008). Shortsightedness concerning retention and recruitment of qualified nurses with the purpose of transferring skills and knowledge contributes significantly to the nursing shortage. Thus, the purpose of this paper is to investigate the impact of inadequate education on the nursing shortage, with consideration of other factors, such as retirement rate among nurses, outdated misconceptions concerning the nursing profession, and underfunding. History of Nursing Shortage In the 1930s, there were changes in the hospital construction process, increased hospital attendance, more technologically sophisticated requirements for patient care, and reduction in the number of work hours (MacLean et al., 2014). By the mid-decade, there were reports on the nursing shortage in the acute care sector. Unprepared to deal with this issue, hospital administrations reacted to the problem slowly (Chan et al., 2012). Some blamed the nurses for creating the shortage claiming that they were unable to deal with their profession and refused to

INADEQUATE EDUCATION AND NURSING SHORTAGE 3 work. By the time the United States was entering World War II, it was evident that the country was facing a critical problem (MacLean et al., 2014). When the U.S joined World War II, there was a need for the nurses to serve in the armed forces. When the war ended, many nurses opted to join the military, which formed 25% of the nurses in the country, and an immediate response was needed to deal with this shortage (Chan et al., 2012). As a solution, educational system taught the students about the rudiments of the nursing profession, highlighting the fact that they delivered most of the patient care (Cox, Willis, & Coustasse, 2014). This strategy was challenging to the hospitals, as the nursing school took several years to complete, upon which the nurses still had to be trained in the hospitals. This led to poor working conditions for nurses, such as long hours and low salaries. Additionally, the fact that nursing was a tiresome job and was not financially rewarding enough stopped many from pursuing this profession. The issue of nursing shortage reappeared in the 1990s in the United States, Asia and Africa. During this time, some of the nursing positions were cut because of the managed care demands that curtailed both the private and public sector in terms of insurance reimbursement rates in most hospitals (MacLean et al., 2014). Most of the decision-makers in the hospitals did not have a good understanding of the issue of nursing, and they implemented plans that increased the workloads of individual registered nurses. According to MacLean et al. (2014), by the year 2005, half a million of the nurses registered in the U.S. chose not to work as nurses. Views regarding the Issue People have different opinions on how poor education contributes to the nursing shortage. One of the factors contributing to the nursing shortage is fewer avenues of producing

INADEQUATE EDUCATION AND NURSING SHORTAGE 4 new specialists due to faculty shortage (Cox, Willis, & Coustasse, 2014). This issue caused many prospective students to be turned away. According to Chan et al. (2012), the current nursing shortage is widespread and dangerous as there are no skilled nurses needed to care for patients and the whole population. The work of the nurses in the world, which is approximately 12 million, is not well understood even by the educated individuals (Chan et al., 2012). However, nursing is a different scientific field, and it is an autonomous profession where skilled practitioners play a significant role in saving the lives of individuals and improving the patients outcome. The vast gap that exists between what the experienced nurses engage in and what the public think they do is a significant factor in the causes of the shortage. Although education is the primary cause of the nursing shortage, there are other factors connected to the issue. They include poor working conditions, aging workforce, inadequate resources to help in conducting research, and the expanded career options for the women. Insufficient quantity of skilled nurses has a significant effect on patient outcome, mortality, and the well-being and health of population worldwide. The nurses should also be proficient in clinical setting communication (Nursing: Scope and Standards of Practice, 2015). Skilled communication, effective decision-making, collaboration, authentic leadership, and appropriate staffing are among the healthy working environment constituents. My Position regarding the Nursing Shortage I am convinced that education plays a significant role in the nursing profession. However, currently, nursing students are not given the required education to help them perform their

INADEQUATE EDUCATION AND NURSING SHORTAGE 5 responsibilities and duties efficiently. Lack of education can be caused by inadequate resources to conduct various activities needed during the training. If the issue of education in the nursing profession is not considered, then the nursing shortage will continue. Although education is a significant factor contributing to the nursing shortage, other factors are also considered. The nurses are lowly paid as compared to the other professions in the medical field. This issue prompts many trained nurses to look for other occupations. The working conditions are also poor, and this makes nurses not to deliver quality care to the patients. It is vital for the government to make some changes in the nursing sector, and the problem should be approached from the root side inadequate education for aspiring nurses.

INADEQUATE EDUCATION AND NURSING SHORTAGE 6 References Chan, Z., Tam, W., Lung, M., Wong, W., & Chau, C. (2012). A systematic literature review of nurse shortage and the intention to leave. Journal Of Nursing Management, 21(4), 605-613. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2834.2012.01437.x Cox, P., Willis, W., & Coustasse, A. (2014). The American epidemic: The US nursing shortage and turnover problem. Paper presented at BHAA 2014, Chicago, IL. MacLean, L., Hassmiller, S., Shaffer, F., Rohrbaugh, K., Collier, T., & Fairman, J. (2014). Scale, causes, and implications of the primary care nursing shortage. Annual Review of Public Health, 35(1), 443-457. http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-publhealth-032013-182508 Nursing: Scope and Standards of Practice. (2015) (3rd ed.). Silver Spring. Retrieved from http://www.nursesbooks.org/ebooks/download/nursing-scope&standards-3e.pdf The Essentials of Baccalaureate Education for Professional Nursing Practice. (2008). Washington. Retrieved from http://www.aacnnursing.org/portals/42/publications/baccessentials08.pdf