Nursing Shortage, How It Currently Affects …show more content…
In the mid 1930’s, numerous reports of nursing shortage began to emerge and become noticeable to the public in the United States (Whelan, 2016). The 1930’s was a time that was still suffering from the financial loss caused by the Great Depression and during the Great Depression, the unemployment rates for Registered Nurses had begun to climb. Hospitals, typically did not have problems employing nurses but by 1936 many of the hospitals reported a severe shortage of nurses (Whelan, 2016). The shortage lasted into the 1960’s and it was the first of many that occurred over the next five decades. Even though each nursing shortage is unique, their reasons for why they occurred and the strategies used to address them are strikingly similar (Whelan, …show more content…
There are different levels of education for Registered nurses. There is Associate Degree of Nursing (ADN), Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) and Master of Science in Nursing (MSN). In order for those programs to be available there must be teachers. The need for educationally qualified teachers available is also affected by nursing shortage (Nardi & Gyurko, 2013). Nursing teacher shortages is attributed to considerable factors, such as global migration of nurses, aging faculty, reduced younger faculty hiring pool, decreased satisfaction with faculty role, and lack of funding and poor salaries (Nardi & Gyurko, 2013). Typically, nurse who purse teaching as a career of do so at a later period of their career, in return there is no lengthy employment. The salary of a nurse that chooses to pursue a career in teaching is not competitive with positions that are outside of teaching. This causes the educators to leave teaching or arrive to it late. The United States offers more competitive salaries for nurses when compared to other countries (Nardi & Gyurko, 2013). The salaries are need to be competitive to attract advanced practice registered nurse to ensure there to be teachers for the future generations of nursing. Another factor that affects the decline in nursing is that approximately sixty percent of Registered Nurses are educated at an Associate