Education, Job Satisfaction Drive Nursing Changes for 2013

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What’s the outlook for nursing in 2013? Will nurses increasingly need advanced degrees? What's causing the high turnover rate among nurses? What will drive the nursing shortage, if it occurs?
 
A recent Q & A with Carol Brewer, published in The Buffalo News, provided some answers. Brewer, a professor of nursing at the University at Buffalo School of Nursing and the associate dean for academic affairs is a member of the New York State Regional Action Committee for the Future of Nursing. She is also co-leader of the RN Work Project, which studies career changes and work attitudes, and the director of nursing for the New York State Area Health Education Center System Statewide Office, which develops nursing policy and workforce development programs.
 
On the subject of higher education for nurses, Brewer referred to a 2010 Institute of Medicine Report, which cited the benefits of a BSN on patient outcomes, and that graduates are not only younger but remain in the workforce longer and continue on to pursue advanced degrees.
 
In regard to turnover rates and how to reduce them, Brewer noted that just over a quarter of hospital-trained nurses leave their first jobs within three years, and over half do so within six years. Most simply move on to another hospital. Reasons vary from changing clinical interests, a healthier work environment, or better work-life balance (shifts, stable hours, etc.).
 
To retain nurses, Brewer points to the success rate enjoyed by Magnet hospitals, which concentrate on improved nurse satisfaction, practice autonomy, and offer better career opportunities. If nurses feel their contributions are valued, they tend to stay. Also helping to retain nurses are “dedicated education units.”
 
Will healthcare reform expand the role of RNs? Brewer suggests that nurses don’t need to expand their roles as new healthcare systems kick in. Nurses know how to move patients through the health care system to produce better outcomes. For example, nurse practitioners can provide safe and effective primary care in a variety of settings. Independent practice nurses have the same patient outcomes as those who practice in collaboration with doctors. It all comes down to money for physicians who want to bill for collaborative services with nurse practitioners.
 
As for the current job shortage for new RNs, Brewer was optimistic. Having lived through three acute shortages of varying lengths (one that lasted nearly 10 years), she notes that the growing numbers of aging nurses leaving the workforce may produce a shortage and trigger more hiring. She indicated that while new nurse graduates may not be getting their first choice jobs, they are landing nursing jobs. 
 
While nursing schools are being flooded with applicants, they’re turning away many. The reason, says Brewer is a shortage of nurses with teaching credentials. It takes up to seven years to produce a doctoral-prepared nurse. That, plus faculty to student clinical ratios have been mandated at 1 to 8. 
 
There’s no doubt that big changes are coming to nursing—both in the numbers and types of jobs. Education and job satisfaction will become the drivers in improving the lives of nurses and ultimately the healthcare they provide. 
 
Image courtesy of Sira Anamwong/FreeDigitalPhotos.net
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  • Leilani W
    Leilani W
    I would like to know this is all great for new nurses but I have yet to see why LVNs are being treated worse than second class citizens as far as working in hospitals. I worked heart and soul for one company for 15 yrs only to be kicked out since I could not finish a RN program on there time table due to family obligations.  Any response would be welcomed.
  •  antoinette h
    antoinette h
    i think its nice and would like to see more about c n a training iam a pca residentail cordanator and would like to work my way to be a nurse
  • Stephanie E
    Stephanie E
    "Nursing Industry very unfair when it comes to LPNs.We are gifted,though RNs do not want us in the clinical areas.LPNs are *finding employment* non- medical scenarios.OK....Answer your own callbells. ( 29 yrs.Proud & accomplished)
  • Dawn M
    Dawn M
    I agree with most of the comments posted here. Age is a factor. I am 58, have 21+ years as an LPN. I have been out of FT work for 3 years. Unable to find a FT position. I have oriented new RN's in the the work place. I have RN's come and ask me questions on solving problems. I have seen new RN grads, leave the field and go back to what they were originally doing because they are unable to find work. I agree with grandfathering in LPN's who have so many years of experience. Allow them to prep and take the exam.
  • Katherine M
    Katherine M
    WELL I knew this was coming but I didn't think it would put me out of work or make me homeless!I've been betrayed by technology!I was an LPN for 21 years,now a degree is required and I'm too old to go into debt and no one cares that i have experience and Nursing was my calling I spent my entire adult life caring for others now who will help me   as I have to depend on Snap and soon ending unemployment to survive!!I was an excellent Nurse and now I am nothing DUE TO YOUR DEGREES YEAH THANKS ALOT !oH YEAH MAYBE IT IS PARTLY BECAUSE I WAS MAKING 21 AN HOUR AND NOW THEY GET DEGREES FOR 14 AN HOUR GEE LET ME THINK ABOUT THAT !!!!!!!
  • Irene N S
    Irene N S
    I have to say; I am one of the nurses that found it very difficult to get into a hospital setting after graduation. Since my graduation in 2010, I had the choice of working at hospitals over an hour away from home or the not so desirable jobs. Not that patient service isn't important in any arena. In my case it was important to start out in a hospital to gain the necessary clinical skills needed to branch out and be marketable. It became a matter of taking what was given and trying to acquire a little here and a little there and having been poorly oriented. As I look back; its not so much about what I haven't acquired but who will hire me and willing to train. Most employers are looking for extensive experience in a particular area or proficiency. The older grads are now competing with the new grads and the pool of inexperienced and lack of experience continues to grow. I hope for all the best.
  • Kelly H
    Kelly H
    I left the hospital because it became more difficult to give the best care. You can go to school for a number of degrees and come out a head pay,hours,benefit's and retirement  than a nurse. Hospitals are in for profit but care has decreased considerably in the past 10 years.
  • Kristine B
    Kristine B
    I graduated with an ADN in 2010, at the age of 49. I am now 52, a former single mother of 2 with one income. I have had a very hard time finding a dependable, good position and am currently working as an RN in pediatric support at a home health agency. I have no intention of retiring for at least 16-17 years, and I need a dependable income to survive. What are we "older" new nurses who aren't planning to retire soon supposed to do? No one seems to want an "older" nurse for the reasons you described in your article, but we don't all fit that category.
  • Troy L
    Troy L
    Nurses will continue to leave nursing as long as they are treated like dogs by physicians and paid like garbage collectors/.AUA
  • Constance M
    Constance M
    I have been a nurse in mostly long term care settings for 25+ years and the changes that I have seen are not good. Overworked staff mandated to 16 hour shifts due to call ins. Its the nurses who care about their patients who are burning out because they have good work ethics. I find it alarming that the nursing field does not acknowledge the 2 yr associate degree nurse with many years of experience aa an asset. Who is going to be the floor nurse of the future. I have seen too many managers and not enough help cause the demise of many new nurses. All nurses no matter how they got there degree are valuable assets.
  • Janet G
    Janet G
    As a LPN I feel that we are being pushed into becoming RN's even though many of us are comfortable being LPN's. Why is this?
  •  Gina H
    Gina H
    WHERE are new grad RN's "landing" jobs anywhere?? I have been looking for almost 3 years!!!!!
  •  Simon W
    Simon W
    Cross your T's and dot your I's. That seems to be the move in nursing these days. Ever increasing paperwork. This is very annoying. I want more time with my patients not my computer S Wilson RN
  • Jane G
    Jane G
    Ms. Brewer must agree that the pay RNs receive is ridiculously low & could easily be a reason to leave the field as well as occupational hazards such as the high incidence of back injuries due to many years of lifting patients.& transporting them around.
  • Beverly l
    Beverly l
    not sure , in 50 and trying to pass the boards , honestly i think the rns should work on their degree and in a hospital fir a yr then licnesed if pass abilities are able . then licensed , not by some state board . this way they can continue their careers on a path that they can succeed at , at even a higher level
  • Pamala J
    Pamala J
    My career as a medical assistant should get acknowledge we go to school to get certified also.     I also went a step farther i too up phlebotomy also.
  • Bruce S
    Bruce S
    Boy are you fulla crap! The only thing changing is the constant need to raise the bar so as to have one more excuse to limit the number of Nurses and Doctors.
  • Michele H
    Michele H
    As an advanced practice nurse (CNS), I am very disappointed that nursing has chose to delete our credential for newcomers.  While it is part of an effort to make all APN's the same, many of us will no longer be able to practice.  After 31 years post masters, I am less than happy, and ourmany hundreds (thousands) of dollars spent for CEU;ssss to keep credentials.  While I am not sorry for what I learned, I feel that nurses are going in the opposite direction of encouraging increase of providers.
  • Christine H
    Christine H
    I want to be a RN so bad but with education costs it doesn't seem likely. I'm starting over in my career field and the medical field is the only thing I want to do. It's a shame I won't be able to help others.I'd give my left kidney in trade if I could get the chance to get my license....... :-)
  • Judy T
    Judy T
    I received my ADN in 2011 and I am now 60 yrs old. I don't feel higher education is needed as pt/nurse ratio and time to do pertinent education with patients. More paperwork is demanded and less and less patient contact. Your 7P-7A nurse has less time for patient education, as the window grows smaller since patients do sleep at night for the most part. Fix what needs to be fixed, concentrate on the problem areas and things should correct itself. It is not degree but ability and intelligence to carry work out and the time given for it.At my age I will not lean toward a BSN. I was hoping to find telephone triage work at home, but a job at Wal-Mart will do just fine also. Thank you
  • E. Joyce R
    E. Joyce R
    As a recently retired faculty member, I agree with the predictions of this writer.Nurses (BSN prepared) are preferred, but many seek positions compatible to their lifestyle. Becoming a Nurse practitioner or a nurse edcucator are roles that can be assumed if the nurse obtains the Masters and/or the doctoral degree. Both take additional years of preparation. The scarcity of physicians to provide for older citizens should provide an alternate opportunity for nurses who wish to leave the hospital and become more autonomous in their practice. In the real world, however, nursing students applicants are older on entry which also means their time in the work force may be different than in previous cohorts. Its a challenge that society needs to be aware of.
  • Claire K
    Claire K
    Prep and Give LPN's the chance to challenge the RN boards
  •  Susan E
    Susan E
    I think it's very sad to know that I've spent 28 years as a ADN, and if I want to change jobs it will be hard cause of lack of degree and age..what happened to experience?
  • Kathy M
    Kathy M
    As an RN for 27 years graduating from a diploma program that was quite popular in the Midwest in the 80's and raising a family with 3 children, still putting the last one through college, I find it difficult to finish my BSN as things have  occurred in life to delay furthering my education and my children's education took precidence.With all this being said, I think if there were more schlorships/grants available for experienced nurses, I think we would have more nurses furthering their education and nursing instructors available to teach future nurses.
  • Veronica N
    Veronica N
    I still do not see improvement in the job  force for new grad RNs.  I do not believe a BSN is necessary to be a med-surg/staff nurse.  Some facilities are asking for too much experience for entry level positions.

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