Overview of National Nursing Shortage
The staffing shortage in nursing has always been a major concern in our healthcare system. The national nursing shortage has been escalating over the past decade. Â
Baby boomer nurses are at the age of retirement, which is further increasing the national nursing shortage. Â
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics projects 194,500 average annual openings for registered nurses between 2020 and 2030, with employment projected to grow by 9%. Â
On average 17.8% of registered nurses’ turnover is reported every year of full-time employees. There are numerous reasons behind increased nurse turnover. It includes workplace violence, lack of support and motivation, pandemic, job dissatisfaction, low nurse-to-patient ratio, etc.
Due to these and many other reasons, many nurses decide to quit, and the jobs remain unfilled. In turn, the nurses who are on job feel overworked, stressed out and dissatisfied. When healthcare organizations have inadequate nurses, the well-being of patients becomes compromised. Â
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