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Nursing
is the nation's largest health care profession with more than 2.9
million registered nurses practicing nationwide. Despite its large
size, many more nurses are needed into the foreseeable future to meet
the growing demand for nursing care. As you plan or consider a career
as a registered nurse, you should know these facts:
- The
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that employment for registered
nurses will grow faster than most other occupations through 2014.
- Nursing students comprise more than half of all health professions students.
- Nurses
comprise the largest single component of hospital staff, are the
primary providers of hospital patient care, and deliver most of the
nation's long-term care.
- Most health care
services involve some form of care by nurses. Although 56.2 percent of
all employed RNs work in hospitals, many are employed in a wide range
of other settings, including private practices, public health agencies,
primary care clinics, home health care, outpatient surgicenters, health
maintenance organizations, nursing school-operated nursing centers,
insurance and managed care companies, nursing homes, schools, mental
health agencies, hospices, the military, and industry. Other nurses
work in careers as college and university educators preparing future
nurses or as scientists developing advances in many areas of health
care and health promotion.
- Though often working
collaboratively, nurses do not simply "assist" physicians and other
health care providers. Instead, they practice independently within
their own defined scope of practice. Nursing roles range from direct
patient care to case management, establishing nursing practice
standards, developing quality assurance procedures, and directing
complex nursing care systems.
- With more than
four times as many RNs in the United States as physicians, nursing
delivers an extended array of health care services, including primary
and preventive care by advanced, independent nurse practitioners in
such clinical areas as pediatrics, family health, women's health, and
gerontological care. Nursing's scope also includes care by clinical
nurse specialists, certified nurse-midwives and nurse anesthetists, as
well as care in cardiac, oncology, neonatal, neurological, and
obstetric/gynecological nursing and other advanced clinical specialties.
- The
primary pathway to professional nursing, as compared to technical-level
practice, is the four-year Bachelor of Science degree in nursing (BSN).
Registered nurses are prepared either through a four-year baccalaureate
program; a two- to three-year associate degree in nursing program; or a
three-year hospital diploma program. Graduates of all three programs
take the same state licensing exam, the NCLEX-RN. (The number of
diploma programs has declined steadily -- to less than 10 percent of
all basic RN education programs -- as nursing education has shifted
from hospital-operated instruction into the college and university
system.)
The Need For The Baccalaureate Nurse
The
Bachelor of Science degree in nursing is the critical first step for a
career in professional nursing. The American Association of Colleges of
Nursing (AACN), American Organization of Nurse Executives (AONE),
American Nurses Association (ANA) and other leading nursing
organizations recognize the BSN degree as the minimum educational
requirement for professional nursing practice. While graduates can
begin practice as an RN with an associate degree or hospital diploma,
the BSN degree is essential for nurses seeking to move up the career
ladder and provide a higher level of quality care..
The BSN nurse is prepared for a broader role.
The BSN nurse is the only basic nursing graduate preferred to practice
in all health care settings -- critical care, ambulatory care, public
health, and mental health -- and thus has the greatest employment
flexibility of any entry-level RN. The BSN curriculum includes a broad
spectrum of scientific, critical-thinking, humanistic, communication,
and leadership skills, including specific courses on community health
nursing not typically included in diploma or associate-degree tracks.
These abilities are essential for today's professional nurse who must
be a skilled provider, designer, manager, and coordinator of care.
Nurses must make quick, sometimes life-and-death decisions; understand
a patient's treatment, symptoms, and danger signs; supervise other
nursing personnel; coordinate care with other health providers; master
advanced technology; guide patients through the maze of health
resources in a community; and teach patients how to comply with
treatment and adopt a healthy lifestyle.
In
particular, a report by the National Advisory Council on Nurse
Education and Practice, an advisory panel to the federal Division of
Nursing, noted that baccalaureate nursing programs are far more likely
than other entry-level tracks to provide students with on-site clinical
training in non-institutional settings outside the hospital. As a
result, the BSN graduate is well-prepared for practice in such sites as
home health agencies, outpatient centers, and neighborhood clinics
where opportunities are fast expanding as hospitals focus more on acute
care and health services move beyond the hospital to more primary and
preventive care throughout the community.
The BSN nurse is preferred.
More nurse executives are indicating their desire for the majority of
their hospital staff nurses to be prepared at the baccalaureate level
to meet the more complex demands of today's patient care. In fact, the
words "BSN preferred" are appearing more frequently in classified ads
for registered nurses nationwide.
Aware of the
expanding opportunities, RNs are seeking the BSN degree in increasing
numbers. In 1980, almost 55 percent of registered nurses held a
hospital diploma as their highest educational credential, 22 percent
held the bachelor's degree, and 18 percent an associate degree,
according to figures from the federal Division of Nursing. By 2004, a
diploma was the highest educational credential for only 17.5 percent of
RNs, while the number with bachelor's degrees had climbed to 34.2
percent, with 33.7 percent holding an associate degree. In addition, 13
percent of the current nursing workforce hold master's or doctoral
degrees. According to a report released by the Health Resources and
Services Administration in July 2002, associate degree in nursing
graduates are declining at a somewhat faster rate than baccalaureate
graduates, with the net result that baccalaureate graduates now
comprise an increasingly greater share of total graduates. These
numbers indicate the high premium that nurses place on advanced
education in today's growing market, and the demand by employers for
RNs who are baccalaureate-prepared.
The Changing Job Market: Some Needed Perspective
Federal
figures project that if current trends continue, the shortage of RNs
will continue to grow throughout the next 20 years. By 2020, more than
800,000 RN positions are expected to go unfilled nationwide, according
to the National Center for Workforce Analysis, an agency of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services. But already, in an expanding
number of markets, hospitals and other employers are struggling to meet
the rising demand for RN care and have stepped up recruitment.
Today's intensified hiring of RNs is being spurred by:
- the mounting health care needs of increasing numbers of elderly;
- a growing population of hospitalized patients who are older, more acutely ill, and in need of more skilled RNs per patient;
- the rapid expansion of front-line primary care to many sites throughout the community;
- technological advances requiring more highly skilled nursing care; and
- an
aging RN workforce. The average age of working RNs in 2004 was 46.8 up
from 40 in 1980. Moreover, only 8.1 percent of RNs were under age 30 in
2004, with high levels of retirements projected in the next 10 to 15
years.
As nursing and health care delivery expand, opportunities abound outside the hospital.
Between 1996-2004, the number of registered nurses in community health
settings, including home health care rose to 14.9 percent. An estimated
11.5 percent of RNs were practicing in outpatient settings in 2004,
including health maintenance organizations and physician- and
nurse-based practices, and 6.3 percent of RNs work in long-term care
facilities.
The average annual earnings of
registered nurses employed in nursing was $57,784 in 2004, according to
the federal Division of Nursing. Clinical Nurses Specialists, Nurse
Practitioners, and other nurses prepared in graduate degree programs
command much higher salaries.
With
patient care growing more complex, ensuring a sufficient RN workforce
isn't merely a matter of how many nurses are needed, but rather an
issue of preparing an adequate number of nurses with the right educational mix to meet health care demands.
The National Advisory Council on Nurse Education and Practice has urged
that at least two-thirds of the basic nurse workforce hold
baccalaureate or higher degrees in nursing by 2010. Currently, only
47.2 percent do.
Moreover, a 1995 report by the
Pew Health Professions Commission called for a more concentrated
production of nurses from bachelor's- and graduate-degree programs.
Today's rising need for registered nurses does not appear to be a
repeat of the widespread nursing shortage of a decade ago, when
employers hired qualified entry-level RNs virtually regardless of their
nursing degree preparation.
Rather, today's demand is different because:
- Employers are seeking nurses prepared at the bachelor's and graduate-degree levels who
can deliver the higher complexity of care required across a variety of
acute-care, primary-care, and community health settings, and to provide
other needed services such as case management, health promotion, and
disease prevention.
- Demand is particularly acute for nurses in key specialties,
such as critical care; neonatal nursing; emergency, operating room, and
labor and delivery units; and for advanced practice RNs such as nurse
practitioners and clinical nurse specialists.
- Though hiring of RNs is accelerating in more cities, today's demand varies region by region, market by market, contrary to the pervasive nationwide shortfall of RNs in the late 1980s.
Job commitments for new graduates show the climbing demand for RNs with advanced clinical skills.
While nursing schools estimate that an average of 77 percent of
entry-level BSN graduates had jobs waiting upon graduation between
August 1997 and July 1998, that number was 93 percent for
master's-degree nursing graduates and 82 percent for graduates of
master's-level nurse practitioner programs.
However,
in the same period, graduates of RN-to-BSN tracks saw the largest pool
of placements, a sign of employers' especially acute demand for
experienced RNs. Nearly all -- an estimated 98.6 percent -- of
RN-to-BSN graduates between August 1997 and July 1998 had jobs waiting,
according to nursing schools responding to an AACN annual survey.
Flexibility is the key.
All projections forecast accelerating demand for nursing care and for
nurses with expanded education and skills. Still, the accelerating
demand for RNs varies by region and market. As a result, flexibility
will be key both for entering and moving within the profession. Some
graduates may need to pursue employment in different parts of their
home states, in another state, or even in another region where hiring
in certain clinical settings or specialties may be more plentiful.
Advanced Practice Nursing: Extending Primary Care's Reach
The
health system's increasing demand for front-line primary care, and the
accelerating drive toward managed care, prevention, and
cost-efficiency, are driving the nation's need for nurse practitioners,
clinical nurse specialists, certified nurse-midwives, and other RNs
with advanced practice skills.
Prepared typically
in master's-degree programs, advanced practice nurses (APNs) include
the following four categories of clinicians:
- Nurse Practitioners (NPs) conduct
physical exams; diagnose and treat common acute illnesses and injuries;
provide immunizations; manage high blood pressure, diabetes, and other
chronic problems; order and interpret X-rays and other lab tests; and
counsel patients on adopting healthy lifestyles and health care options
as a part of their clinical roles. In addition to practicing in clinics
and hospitals in metropolitan areas, the nation's estimated 141,209
nurse practitioners also deliver care in rural sites, inner cities, and
other locations not adequately served by physicians, as well as to
other populations, such as children in schools and the elderly. Many
NPs work in pediatrics, family health, women's health, and other
specialties, and some have private practices. Nurse practitioners can
prescribe medications in all states, while 25 states have given NPs
authority to practice independently without physician collaboration or
supervision.
- Clinical Nurse Specialists (CNSs) provide
care in a range of specialty areas, such as cardiac, oncology,
neonatal, and obstetric/gynecological nursing, as well as pediatrics,
neurological nursing, and psychiatric/mental health. Working in
hospitals and other clinical sites, CNSs provide acute care and mental
health services, develop quality assurance procedures, and serve as
educators and consultants. An estimated 72,000 clinical nurse
specialists are currently in practice.
- Certified Nurse-Midwives
(CNMs) provide prenatal and gynecological care to normal healthy women;
deliver babies in hospitals, private homes, and birthing centers; and
continue with follow-up postpartum care. In 2002, CNM deliveries
accounted for 8.1 percent of all births in the U.S., up from 6.5
percent in 1996, according to the National Center for Health
Statistics. There are approximately 13, 700 CNMs nationwide.
- Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (CRNAs)
administer more than 65 percent of all anesthetics given to patients
each year, and are the sole anesthesia providers in approximately
two-thirds of all rural hospitals in the U.S., according to the
American Association of Nurse Anesthetists (AANA). Of the 24 million
anesthetics given annually, about 20 percent are administered by CRNAs
practicing independently and 80 percent by CRNAs in collaboration with
physician anesthesiologists, says AANA. Working in the oldest of the
advanced nursing specialties, CRNAs administer anesthesia for all types
of surgery in settings ranging from operating rooms and dental offices
to outpatient surgical centers. There are more than 32,600 CRNAs in
practice nationwide.
Mounting
studies show that the quality of APN care is equal to, and at times
better than, comparable services by physicians, and often at lower cost. For example,
Even
after acknowledging flaws in some of the studies it reviewed in 1986,
the congressional Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) concluded that
nurse practitioners can deliver as much as 80 percent of the health
services, and up to 90 percent of the pediatric care, provided by
primary care physicians, at equal or better quality and at less cost.
In the 12 studies reviewed, OTA found that the quality of care by nurse
practitioners -- including communication with patients, preventive
actions, and reductions in the number of patient symptoms -- was higher
than comparable care by physicians.
At the
University of Rochester, researchers reported that intensive-care
babies cared for by neonatal nurse practitioners averaged 2.4 fewer
hospital days and more than $3,400 less in charges than those cared for
by medical residents, despite the fact that the NPs' infants were
younger and had significantly lower birthweight. Unlike residents,
nurse practitioners don't rotate, are "more consistent caregivers" who
can follow infants through their entire stay, and need to rely less on
support services to stay apprised of a patient's progress, the authors
suggest in the 1994 study.
Last Updated: September 5, 2006
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
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Turn Away More Than 30,000 Qualified Applications in 2005
Nursing Shortage Resource
CampusRN/AACN Career Center and Scholarship Fund
Accelerated Programs: The Fast-Track to a Nursing Career
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