A long-term nursing shortage—that began nearly ten years ago and is predicted to last nearly two decades—meets a worldwide pandemic wrought by a highly contagious, complex virus, and the healthcare field is thrust into a crisis. Unfortunately, that is the reality of the current nursing shortage in the U.S.
Pre-pandemic, many components drove the shortage, including the aging of America’s largest generation, the Baby Boomers. The 65+ demographic has soared in recent years, with census data indicating that this age group will reach 73 million by 2030. Lengthened lifespans that stretch the timeframe for needed medical services have increased the need for healthcare services. And, not only do these folks require more services for a more extended time, these same Baby Boomers are retiring in droves from, you guessed it, nursing and other healthcare positions.
All of these driving forces have culminated in an extreme need for nurses. Various studies estimate that over 500,000 to a million new registered nurses will be needed by 2030. And that was before COVID-19.
The coronavirus outbreak has exponentially intensified the nursing shortage, creating additional factors that have impacted the supply and demand of nurses. As a result, nurses continue to leave the profession, citing exhaustion, overwhelming despair, mounting stress, and fear for their health. While awaiting the vaccine, the hopes of frontline workers were buoyed, encouraging them to stay the course. But the resurgence of COVID-19 cases again pummeled these exhausted, frustrated caregivers.
Many facilities find themselves with ever-increasing open positions. Being so short-staffed puts additional strain on nurses who have been coping with staffing shortages, in many instances, for years. The fear that more nurses will move up their retirement plans, take a leave of absence, or seek less stressful jobs is indeed real and quite troubling to administrators, who are all too familiar with the challenges presented by long-term staffing shortages, including—
Solutions that address this ongoing crisis include—
Healthcare systems continue to feel the strain of our aging population and nurses shoulder much of the patient's responsibility. For these organizations, establishing a working partnership with a recruitment firm such as LeaderStat can be an ongoing tool for recruitment and staffing needs.