Top Best Tips For Nursing Shortages Worsen As Baby Boomers Age

 


Top Best Tips For Nursing Shortages Worsen As Baby Boomers Age

Many strong vintages reached important milestones last year. The earliest baby boomers turned 70 in early 1946 and are now changing that age at a rate of 10,000 people a day for the next 18 years. The Census Bureau also reports that for the first time in history, the aging population aged 65 and over will double the number of children (ages 5 and under) worldwide within the next 3 years. This has broad implications for health care and nursing, both now and in the future, especially since there is already a shortage of nurses. How the nursing industry is dealing with this troubling shortage.* nursing schools are trying to meet the demand by expanding their programs and offering accelerated courses; however, there is still projected to be a huge shortage of registered nurses (RNs). So where do these deficiencies occur? Which countries, people, and fields will be most affected? A growing problem According to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN), demand for RNs among the workforce is expected to grow 16 percent to 3.2 million jobs in 2024, one of the highest of any industry in the US. 1 million RNs will reach retirement age in the next 10 to 15 years. So who will replace these retirees and replace the expected demand? That's not clear yet. 

Education of nurses, The AACN reports that nursing schools nationwide saw only a 3.6 percent increase in enrollment, which doesn't come close to meeting the projected demand for nurses in the coming years. The problem is the lack of qualified teachers. The AACN reports that in 2016, 64,067 qualified nursing school applicants were rejected due to teacher shortages. Deficiencies by state Who will feel the shortage of nurses the most? According to Becker's Hospital Review, several states will experience the brunt of the nursing shortage by 2025, including Arizona, Colorado, North Carolina, Maryland, Nevada, and Washington. Deficiencies by specialization Some nursing fields will suffer more shortages than others because they are the fastest-growing fields through 2022. These fields, according to Nurse Journal, include nurse midwife, practical nurse, anesthetist, clinical nurse, psychiatric nurse, trauma nurse, and travel nurse. Travel nurses are and will continue to be—one of the highest-demand fields, especially in some major U.S. cities like Los Angeles, Denver, Seattle, Atlanta, Minneapolis, Houston, and Chicago, according to LRS Healthcare.

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