Political Analysis of Establishing the Baccalaureate Degree as Minimum Requirement for Nursing
Establishing the baccalaureate degree as minimum requirement for nursing
Identifying and analyzing the problem
The challenges of the modern healthcare environment have grown increasingly complex and diversified. The skills required for a competent nurse have grown and expanded with changes in technology; also, cost-cutting by many major healthcare institutions have shifted duties once solely confined to physicians onto the shoulders of nurses. Given the additional roles and responsibilities assumed by nurses, there have been increasing demands that nurses have at least a baccalaureate degree as minimum requirement for entering the nursing profession. At present 39% of all nurses have degrees from four-year colleges (Perez-Pena 2012:2).
Outlining and analyzing proposed solutions
Despite the nursing shortage, many hospitals have begun to demand that nurses now have a B.A., causing many seasoned nurses to have to return to school. "That shift has contributed to a surge in enrollment in nursing courses at four-year colleges, particularly at the more than 600 schools that have opened 'R.N. To B.S.N.' programs, for people who are already registered nurses to earn bachelor's degrees. Fueled by the growth in online courses, enrollment in such programs is almost 90,000, up from fewer than 30,000 a decade ago, according to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing" (Perez-Pena 2012:1). This number is likely to increase as "professional groups and employers continue to push for more education, citing studies linking better-educated nurses to better patient care. Where traditional nursing education focuses on practical skills, students in four-year programs learn more about theory, public health and research" (Perez-Pena 2012:1).
And an "added incentive for hospitals is the coveted 'magnet' designation, awarded by the American Nurses Association to about 400 hospitals and sometimes featured in their advertising. Among the association's criteria for magnet status is the nursing staff's level of education" (Perez-Pena 2012:1). However, considerable challenges remain for nurses wishing to return to improve their education as well as undergraduates wishing to obtain a B.A. In nursing,...
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