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Tuesday, September 10, 2013

More Men In Nursing Is Trend Enough To Solve Shortage

Higher wages and job security are prompting more men to enter the field of nursing.

According to a Vanderbilt University School of Nursing study, the number of male nurses in the United States has nearly doubled since the 1980s – growing from 5 percent to 9 percent of the nation’s 1.8 million nurses.

Just as the number of men in nursing has steadily climbed, so has the public’s perception of the profession. A recent Gallup Poll ranked nursing as the most trusted profession, above teachers, military officers and even doctors.

This is promising news for those working to end the nationwide nursing shortage and stave off an impending health-care crisis. According to the Vanderbilt study, the nursing shortage could approach 800,000 positions by 2020.

To recruit and retain more nurses, educators must address the shortage of nursing faculty in the nation’s colleges and universities.

According to an enrollment survey by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing, more than 26,000 qualified applicants were turned away from undergraduate programs last year due in large part to faculty shortages.

Hostipal wards, universities and nursing organizations will work to end the nursing shortage with help from private-sector pursuits, such as The Johnson & Manley Campaign for Nursing’s Future.

The goals with this $30 million public-awareness campaign are to further improve the image of the nursing jobs profession, recruit new nurses and faculty and retain nurses currently out there.

“Building awareness of the shortage of nurses and nurse faculty, as well as the features about a career in nursing, has had a big impact, ” mentioned Andrea Higham, director of The actual Johnson & Johnson Campaign regarding Nursing’s Future. “But concerted efforts must continue if we’re to head off what is predicted to become huge problem well into another decade. ”The campaign sponsors fundraising events called Promise of Nursing galas, which have raised more than $7 million for nursing scholarships, faculty fellowships and specialized nursing program grants.

Higham said men are a key target of the awareness campaign, noting that if the number of men entering nursing each year grew to anywhere near the number of women entering the field, the nursing shortage would cease to exist.

Will the growing number of men entering the profession be enough to eliminate the shortage in time to accommodate the surge of baby boomers in need of increased medical care? Only time will tell. – NU

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