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Nursing shortages
approach critical condition
Hospitals
try sign-on bonuses, tuition pay and recruiting drives
to help
by
Holly M. Rodriguez

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When
Rita Baker walks through the Medical Surgery Unit of
Norton Community Hospital at 7 a.m., she has 35 to 40
patients waiting for their medications. The Wise County
resident knows what the day entails. Her odds of taking
a sit-down break during her often 12-hour shifts are
50-50. Shell likely have to chase down patients
paperwork so she can administer their medicine. And,
she must complete a mountain of work by the end of her
shift because her company wont tolerate excessive
overtime.
But
shes used to it. Baker, 58, has been working as
a licensed practical nurse for 40 years, and would not
trade her job for any other. There are days when
you sit down, and days when you dont, but I dont
mind it, she says. I never minded working
... but it is stressful.
Across
the commonwealth and the country, nurses must cope with
the same daily stresses: constant life and death issues,
more job choices elsewhere, fewer teachers to prepare
new nurses and a dwindling supply of newcomers to the
job. All in all, they add up to a shortage of nurses
that could have profound effects on the quality of medical
care. To combat it, the health care sector is trying
stopgap measures such as actively recruiting nurses,
paying for their school tuitions and offering sign-on
and referral bonuses.
Unless
corrective steps are taken, the shortage will become
an unabashed crisis. The U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services estimates that in 2020, 44 states, including
Virginia, will have severe nursing shortages. A 21 percent
shortage of full-time registered nurses is projected
for the commonwealth by the year 2010. The figure is
expected to increase to 36 percent by 2020. Sixty percent
of registered nurses work in hospitals, which have the
greatest vacancy needs.
Even
in the short term, the shortage is affecting patients.
The scarcity of nurses has already caused hospitals
to close beds, reduce admissions and surgeries and divert
patients from emergency rooms. Higher nurse-to-patient
ratios are causing employees to feel burned out and
dissatisfied with their jobs, according to the Journal
of the American Medical Association.
The
supply of nurses has been shrinking in recent years.
Nursing school graduations have dropped 25 percent in
the past six years, says Barbara Brown, vice president
of the Virginia Hospital and Healthcare Association.
Enrollment in nursing programs is down 19 percent in
five years, according to the Virginia Partnership for
Nursing.
While
the problem is approaching critical levels in metropolitan
areas, its impacts are worse in smaller localities.
Ursula Butts, vice president of patient care services
for Community Memorial Healthcenter in rural South Hill,
says recruitment and retention in rural communities
is more difficult than in the states larger cities.
For one, salaries are better in urban areas. And theres
more to do outside of work. There is little social
or night life [here] unless you are from here, and thats
been difficult, Butts says.
Those
trends are driving efforts to recruit and retain nurses.
Hospitals are improving working conditions and providing
incentives, and employee referral programs and sign-on
bonuses have been implemented in hospitals across the
state. At Community Memorial Healthcenter in South Hill,
for example, employees are paid $2,000 for recruiting
an employee to the hospital.
Most
localities, no matter the size, are offering full scholarship
programs for nurses, in exchange for several years of
service in the grantors community. HCA Richmond
Hospitals recently announced $600,000 in grants and
scholarships for students who enroll in licensed practical
nursing and registered nursing programs in the Richmond
and Northern Virginia areas. Funds are given to students
to cover education expenses and provide living stipends
to eliminate barriers such as child or elder
care or transportation issues that often cause
students to postpone or drop out of programs. In exchange
for funds, students are required to work in the Richmond
or Northern Virginia area for a period of three to four
years, on average.
While
many hospitals offer programs similar to HCAs,
some have also concentrated efforts on recruiting faculty.
For example, when the Central Shenandoah Valley Region
Workforce Investment Board was awarded a $2.4 million
grant from the U.S. Department of Labor in 2001, local
officials realized that recruiting nursing instructors
was more critical than just hiring nurses, says Sharon
Johnson, the project director who handles the disbursement
of funds to various employment programs. Approximately
$750,000 of the grant will be used to recruit students
and faculty. We think, with this concentrated
effort, this will largely handle the shortage in the
area short-term, Johnson says.
Some
health professionals say theyre seeing rural areas
get a boost because they offer a better quality of life.
Traditionally, it has been more difficult to recruit
in rural areas thank goodness thats beginning
to change, says Faye Matthews, director of marketing
services for Community Memorial Healthcenter. People
are beginning to enjoy getting away from the hustle
and bustle of the city, and we are beginning to see
that change a little bit."
One
rural school is going the extra mile so students dont
have to. Just a few years ago, the nursing program at
Southside Virginia Community College offered the first
year of study at the college, located in South Hill.
The second year, however, students were required to
commute an hour and a half to Richmond for clinical
nurse training. That created a barrier, because
many of our students work and have families, Matthews
says.
So,
Community Memorial, along with other regional groups
including Greensville Memorial Hospital in Emporia,
Halifax Regional Hospital in South Boston and Southside
Community Hospital in Farmville, each contributed $25,000
to create a local program similar to the nurse training
offered in Richmond so nurses can avoid the rough daily
commute. Weve also been providing our facilities
for training, our nurses for instruction and supervisors
to help with training on-site for these students,
says Chris Lumsden, CEO of Halifax Regional Health System.
Each
hospital also contributed an additional $5,000 for marketing
efforts. The latest marketing efforts for the nursing
profession are focused on changing the image of the
profession, and reaching out to populations that have
not traditionally dominated the field. We are
actually doing intense marketing, says Nancy Langston,
dean of Virginia Commonwealth Universitys School
of Nursing. Historically, all weve had to
do is give information to people who were interested,
but we have to change that.
The
Virginia Partnership for Nursing has launched a poster
campaign, targeting students in grades K-12. The first
leg of the campaign focuses on encouraging men to consider
nursing. The field is currently 95 percent female, and
the typical nurse is white, and in her mid-40s. Langston
says the next series, called the Color of Care, will
focus on nurses of different ethnic and racial groups.
Many
executives and nursing professionals say that while
current marketing and recruitment efforts are off to
a strong start, they are pessimistic about having an
overall significant impact on the shortage. Is
there a light at the end of the tunnel? Not quickly
enough, Brown says. The main goal in the near
future is to minimize the shortage as much as possible,
because eliminating it, at least in the foreseeable
future, probably is not realistic. Each of our
schools of nursing would have to increase by half to
meet projected shortages and that is if there
was no growth in health care needs at all, Langston
says.
Return
to Virginia Business - January 2003
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