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The Nursing Shortage in a Nutshell


America's health care system is in trouble – and it's not just the HMOs that are the problem. America – and the rest of the world – faces a nursing shortage that more severe than ever and could significantly worsen in the future. The current situation is a product of decreasing supply and increasing demand, and not even the nurses are benefiting from the situation.

Did you know?
Of 168,000 unfilled hospital positions nationwide, 126,000 or 75% of those positions are for nurses.
A recent American Nursing Association survey showed that 75% of nurses felt the quality of care where they worked had declined over the past two years.
40% of nurses said they would worry about sending a family member or loved one to be cared for at their own facility.
The number of nursing candidates taking the NCLEX®* decreased 31.3% from 1995 to 2002.

Currently, the shortage is more apparent in rural areas, but in the future even urban centers will be affected. Nursing shortages have occurred in the past, but with the baby boom generation getting older and new nurses getting harder to find, demand for health care will increase while the ability to meet it declines.

Moreover, while fewer young nurses are entering the profession, those that do find a world of opportunity before them, leading to high turnover rates. The average nurse vacancy rate overall is 10.2%; this means that on average nine nurses are doing the work of ten, and in rural areas often much more. Despite the availability of employment, however, in a recent ANA survey, 54% of nurses said they would not recommend their profession to their children or their friends. Given that many hospitals have to offer lucrative signing bonuses to attract nurses in the first place, the combination of general dissatisfaction and ever-present opportunity has led to an average RN turnover rate in acute care hospitals of 21.3%, according to the report Acute Care Hospital Survey of RN Vacancies and Turnover Rates in 2000 by the American Organization of Nurse Executives.

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