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The Pandemic Emphasizes the Nursing Shortage in Texas

The Pandemic Emphasizes the Nursing Shortage in Texas

Nursing is the backbone of healthcare in the United States and across the world. Nurses have always聽聽the meaning of 鈥渆ssential worker,鈥 long before the COVID-19 pandemic drove the point home.

COVID-19 focused our attention on the essential nature of nurses and the challenges facing the future of nursing,聽. The crushing weight of the health crisis fell hardest on nurses. And nurses are in short supply.

But the lessons of the pandemic also present an聽聽for dedicated nurses, healthcare organizations, and nursing colleges to help shape the future of healthcare.

The Nursing Shortage

Nurses make up the largest segment of the healthcare sector. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects 7 percent job growth through the rest of the decade, from 3 million nurses in 2019 to 3.3 million in 2029.

After accounting for retirement and nurses exiting the field, BLS data suggests 175,900 job openings each year. In other words, there are plenty of nursing jobs available and will be for the foreseeable future, but not enough trained nurses to fill them.

Why is this?

Over a decade ago, the Institute of Medicine published its landmark research,聽. The report cautioned of a nursing workforce capacity shortfall throughout the United States. Two pressure points push the ongoing nursing shortage.

At one end of the equation, healthcare demand steadily increases with the aging Baby Boomer generation. Nursing schools, on the other hand,聽聽to meet the swelling demand. Therefore, many traditional nursing programs don鈥檛 have the resources to accommodate all qualified applicants.

According to the聽, the nursing gap is forecast to spread across the country through 2030, given the status quo.

While country-wide, the nursing shortage will hit the hardest in the south and west.

The key to 鈥渂ridging the gap,鈥 says the Institute of Medicine in its report, is through 鈥渆xpanding nursing capacity.鈥

The research calls for increasing to 80 percent the number of baccalaureate-prepared nurses in the workforce and doubling the number of nurses with doctoral degrees. Before the pandemic, only 64.2 percent of the nursing workforce held a bachelor鈥檚 degree, falling well short of that recommendation.

The Nursing Shortage in Texas

Texas reflects these national trends. There are too few nurses stretched across too many patients. Recent data published in the聽聽shows Texas with among the lowest per capita nurse-to-population ratio in the country, with 9.62 nurses per 1000 residents.

In 2019, a Texas Governmental Public Health Nurse Staffing Study聽聽that 鈥渉igh vacancy and turnover rates can lead to negative outcomes that can affect the quality of care鈥 by increasing workload and stress levels of existing staff. Then, in 2020, COVID-19 came calling. The challenges already in place exploded into a聽.

Nurses in Texas and across the country faced聽. As the pandemic spiraled out of control, everyone looked to nurses for frontline care.

Nursing is the Linchpin to Quality Healthcare

While the pandemic emphasizes the nursing shortage in Texas and elsewhere, it also underscores the critical role nurses play in the healthcare system 鈥 now and into the future. According to the聽Future of Nursing聽report, 鈥淭he nursing profession has the potential to affect wide-reaching changes in the health care system.鈥

The 鈥渞egular proximity to patients and scientific understanding of care processes鈥 gives nurses 鈥渁 unique ability to act as partners with other health professionals.鈥 When fully utilized, this partnership can 鈥渓ead in the improvement and redesign of the health care system and its many practice environments.鈥

Crucially, addressing their needs and concerns, such as nursing聽听补苍诲听, should inform staffing and care delivery decisions.

The more policy reflects nurses as the linchpin to quality healthcare, the closer we are to bridging the nursing gap.

麻豆视频 Filling the Nursing Gap

As we鈥檝e discussed, the nursing shortage is not necessarily for lack of people motivated to become nurses.

Traditional location-based nursing programs simply do not have the resources to accept all the qualified applications received. Working nurses ready to pursue their bachelor鈥檚 degree are often in no position to attend a ground-based program. A bottleneck in nurse training is the consequence. The solution is a new model for nursing education. An聽听颈苍听The Dallas Morning News聽speaks to this solution:

鈥淥nline nursing programs, which are already growing faster than face-to-face programs nationwide and in Texas, allow institutions to meet time-pressed and place-bound students where they are,鈥 says author Susan Hernandez.聽鈥淭his is especially critical for nurses with two-year degrees who are already working in hospitals, who cannot easily pick up and attend four-year institutions in person.鈥

麻豆视频 epitomizes Hernandez鈥檚 point. HCU鈥檚聽聽is designed to meet the need outlined in聽The Future of Nursing聽report of increasing baccalaureate-trained nurses.

The 100 percent online program allows working registered nurses the flexibility to earn a BSN degree while maintaining their professional life. 麻豆视频 aligns with the recommendations presented by the Insitute of Medicine in the聽Future of Nursing.

Flexible and industry-aligned, HCU is a model for meeting the challenges of our most essential workers. Training qualified,聽聽nurses allows each to meet the potential of their capabilities and turn the tide of the nursing shortage.