Abstract
Globally, a nursing shortage is impeding the advancement of healthcare systems around the world. The nursing shortage refers to any situation in which the labor market cannot keep up with patient demands. Causes of the nursing shortage include poor working conditions leading to high turnover rates, insufficient nursing education programs, and lack of incentives for nurses to work in areas of critical concern. Effects of the nursing shortage include further staff shortages due to high stress environments and poor patient care—including higher rates of mortality and morbidity. Nursing shortages have affected almost every region of the world, and may become worse unless concerted efforts are made to remedy the problem.
Introduction
Even the most advanced healthcare systems in the world are short on nursing staff. As a result, existing nurses are working longer hours under high duress, and are more prone to making errors or experiencing workplace violence and abuse. Patients are dying from preventable causes or becoming ill due to inefficient nursing care. If nothing is done soon to mitigate the nursing shortage, the entire globe could witness major crises in healthcare delivery.
Nurses have recently made inroads to improve the role and status of the profession, but much more needs to be done. The burgeoning patient population implies ever-increasing demand for qualified nursing staff, but there is no real plan in place anywhere to ensure that enough nurses will be staffed at the healthcare institutions or in the communities in which they are needed most. Nursing education programs at the level of higher education are overburdened, and even qualified students eager to participate in the healthcare professions are turned down daily due to lack of teaching faculty. The nursing shortage has reached a critical point, requiring effective policy intervention.
What is a Nursing Shortage?
A nursing shortage refers to an insufficient number of nursing professionals. Therefore, a nursing shortage is a staff shortage. Nursing is an incredibly broad and diverse field, encompassing a wide range of specializations within clinical practice. In addition to clinical practice, nurses can work in education to teach the future generation of nursing professionals. A nursing shortage may refer to any specific situation in which there are fewer nurses than are required to meet current or projected patient demands.
Nursing shortages generally occur in specific geographic regions. Areas that are especially vulnerable to nursing shortages include those in which the patient population is growing while the nursing staff is shrinking. Currently, nursing shortages have become chronic issues around the world but do affect some areas more than others.
As demand for healthcare services rise, there will be a corresponding need for more nursing staff. Ironically, increases in quality of care worldwide have contributed to the nursing shortage. Better healthcare services mean increased longevity, which in turn leads to increasing demands for nurses throughout the course of a patient’s lifetime. Similarly, the more wealth accumulated worldwide, the higher the demand for healthcare services will be among populations who even just a generation ago could not access or afford healthcare services.
Why is There a Nursing Shortage?
The simplest way of describing the nursing shortage is in terms of basic economics: supply and demand. Currently, the demand for nurses far outweighs the supply of nurses in the labor pool. In spite of the fact that many nurses are willing to relocate for work, there are still chronic nursing shortages in some areas because the number of nurses entering the profession simply cannot keep pace with the rising population and the increased demands for healthcare services.
In the United States and other wealthy nations, the population has been aging rapidly. The rapidly aging population has further increased the demand for nurses but nursing schools cannot keep pace with this demand. Nursing education is therefore a primary reason why there is a nursing shortage....
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