The Nursing Shortage is Growing
The current U.S. nursing shortage is an issue that healthcare administrators have warned about for decades. According to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN), the issue stems from a projected shortage of RNs, “As Baby Boomers age, the need for health care grows. Compounding the problem is the fact that nursing schools across the country are struggling to expand capacity.“
Nursing schools have limited budgets and staff, which results in the bottleneck effect from a lack of graduating student nurses. There are only so many new nurses entering the workforce each year. This is not enough to cover the deficit created by those leaving the profession due to the lack of job satisfaction, burnout, and retirement.
In a recently published study by The National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) regarding the nursing shortage crisis, “more registered nurse jobs will be available through 2022 than any other profession in the United States.“ Consequently, nurses often work long hours under stressful conditions, resulting in fatigue, injury, and job dissatisfaction.
With increased pressure, fatigue, and severity of patient illness, nurses within these environments are prone to making errors – leaving patients to suffer the consequences.
While the need for nurses continues to grow, AACN projects that the nursing shortage will continue long after the COVID-19 pandemic has ended. This is due to nursing faculty shortages, lack of adequate funding, and insufficient classroom space at many baccalaureate and graduate nursing programs in the U.S.
So, what can we do about it? How do we, as nurses and nursing managers, rally together to fix the problem and eliminate burnout to retain our nurses and alleviate the nursing shortage? 
How to Retain Your Nurses
As we have seen through the pandemic, employers and hospital institutions are incorporating financial incentives into their hiring tactics to lessen the nursing shortage. This includes sign-on bonuses, retention pay, and crisis pay, as well as offering financial rewards to their nurses for referring others to join the field.
This is only a short-term solution at best, a Band-Aid on an ever-growing problem.
Administrators should begin by assessing why their nurses are leaving. Exit interviews, turnover rate statistics, infection control reports, and patient satisfaction data are all helpful tools to determine the reasons why so many are leaving the profession.
Results from exit interviews should give answers to the following questions:
- ‘Are you leaving because you felt unsupported?’
- ‘Is there a clash in morals or values creating your motive to leave?’
- ‘Is there a preceptorship program in place to orient and train your nurses to work safely and efficiently, to ensure workplace satisfaction and patient safety?‘
We must determine at the root cause and establish what we can do to fix that before blaming external factors such as the aging population and/or shortage of new nurses.