Ways to alleviate acute shortage of RNs.

PositionHealth Care - Registered nurses

The acute shortage of registered nurses in the U.S. could be lessened by adopting tactics used successfully in other segments of the economy, including sweetening incentives for experienced nurses to stay on the job and enticing nurses who have left the profession back into the market, proposes a study by the University at Buffalo (N.Y.).

"Retaining older RNs in the workforce is an important means of addressing the nursing shortage, and employers and policymakers need to focus on this," insists Carol S. Brewer, associate professor in the School of Nursing. "Keeping older nurses in health care workplaces will require multiple strategies that target income opportunities, working conditions, and recruitment strategies. Given the current projections for shortages lasting into 2020, more attention should be focused on this group of nurses."

Registered nurses employed in other fields also offer a potential pool of experienced clinical nurses--7.2% of nurses sampled in 29 states were working in nonclinical settings--as do nurses who have retired, she adds.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The study compared characteristics and work attitudes of RNs aged 50 and older with those of nurses younger than 50 at baseline and then a year later. It also compared responses of older RNs working in nursing with RNs from the same age group working outside nursing or retired. In general, this comparison showed that older RNs were more satisfied, more committed to their organization, and had less desire to quit than their younger counterparts...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT