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Nursing Industry Desperate To Find New Hires

Nursing Industry Desperate To Find New Hires

While other industries are shedding jobs, nursing recruiters are frantically trying to hire new workers to address a nationwide nursing shortage expected to worsen as the population ages. (AP Photo/ Dinesh Ramde )

Dinesh Ramde / Associated Press

January 05, 2009

MILWAUKEE – Please, please accept a high-paying job with us. In fact, just swing by for an interview and we’ll give you a chance to win cash and prizes.

Sounds too good to be true, especially in an economy riddled with job cuts in nearly every industry. But applicants for nursing jobs are still so scarce that recruiters have been forced to get increasingly inventive.

One Michigan company literally rolled out a red carpet at a recent hiring event. Residential Home Health, which provides in-home nursing for seniors on Medicare, lavished registered nurses and other health care workers with free champagne and a trivia contest hosted by game-show veteran Chuck Woolery. Prizes included a one-year lease for a 2009 SUV, hotel stays and dinners.

“We’re committed to finding ways to creatively engage with passive job seekers,” said David Curtis, president of the Madison Heights-based company.

Recruiters like Curtis may have little choice. The long-standing U.S. nurse shortage has led to chronic understaffing that can threaten patient care and nurses’ job satisfaction, and the problem is expected to worsen.

The shortage has been operating since World War II on an eight- to 10-year cycle, industry experts say. Each time the number of nurses reaches a critical low, the government adds funding and hospitals upgrade working conditions. But as the deficit eases, those retention efforts fade and eventually the old conditions return, often driving nurses into other professions.

“We recently had a hiring event where, for experienced nurses to interview — just to interview — we gave them $50 gas cards,” said Tom Zinda, the director of recruitment at Wheaton Franciscan Healthcare in the Milwaukee-area city of Glendale. “We really try to get as creative as we can. It’s a tough position to fill.”

Recruiters across the country have tried similar techniques, offering chair massages, lavish catering and contests for flat-screen TVs, GPS devices and shopping sprees worth as much as $1,000.

Even strong salaries aren’t doing the trick. Registered nurses made an average of $62,480 in 2007, ranging from a mean of $78,550 in California to $49,140 in Iowa, according to government statistics. Including overtime, usually abundantly available, the most experienced nurses can earn more than $100,000.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts about 233,000 additional jobs will open for registered nurses each year through 2016, on top of about 2.5 million existing positions. But only about 200,000 candidates passed the Registered Nurse licensing exam last year, and thousands of nurses leave the profession each year.

Several factors are in play: a lack of qualified instructors to staff training programs, lack of funding for training programs, difficult working conditions and the need for expertise in many key nursing positions.


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    SPaps

    10 months ago

    2 comments

    I am a LPN specializing in Wound Care and I cannot AFFORD to pay for my own RN training!!!! I'd be a happy camper if a recruiter be willing to hire me working in wound clinic and have company pay my education to become a RN and go into MORE training as Wound Care consultant! Heck, I care more about patients or residents in nursing homes than about MONEY.....anyone interested to have me?????????????

  • Photo_user_blank_big

    CATH

    10 months ago

    4 comments

    IT HAS COME TIME THAT THE NURSING SHORTAGE BE CORRECTED,BEING IN MEDICINE FOR 30 PLUS YEARS IN ALL CARDIAC ROLES I FEEL THAT NURSING SHOULD START A PROGRAM THAT TAKES MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS WITH YEARS OF PATIENT CARE TRAIN THEM TO BECOME NURSES WITHOUT THE REQUIRED FOUR YEARS OF TRAINING WHICH INCLUDES TWO YEARS OF COURSES THAT ARE NEVER USED.THE ANSWER IS OJT ON THE JOB TRAINING FOR MEDICAL PERSONS THAT CAN QUICKLY BE TRAINED AND PUT IN THE FIELD.THE SCHOOLS WILL DISLIKE THIS AVENUE DUE TO LOSS OF INCOME BUT WHAT IS MORE IMPORTANT PATIENT CARE OR THE MONEY THAT PROGRAMS CHARGE AND THE TIME IT TAKES TO COMPLETE TRAINING.THINK ABOUT IT?COULD HAVE IMMEDIATE ANSWER TO NURSE SHORTAGE.
    RICHARD EDWARDS

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    mskittyi

    10 months ago

    8 comments

    I'd love to have help finishing my nursing degree. Anyone interested? I have tons of skills and would love to be a preceptor eventually!!! I just can not afford the last 1.5 semesters.

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    pamela9

    10 months ago

    2 comments

    I have been an R.N., B.S.N. Case Manager for about 20 years. Hospital's burn their Case Manager's out with constant pressure to get pt's out, often without regard to their current status or whether or not the pt has a "safe" discharge plan with scheduled follow up appts. when appropriate. I was carrying a case load between 20-40 pt's. It's impossible and unrealistic to be able to manager that many pt's. (not every pt requires a Case Manager, but when they do, 1 case could potentially use up your whole day). I begged for help-----I got nothing. I resigned. This has happened over & over again to the point I'm not sure I even like Nursing anymore. I am a Certified Nurse Educator and I am thinking about teaching Nursing. I have so much knowledge, I just cannot put up with the politic's, clicks, poor leadership, inflexability, just caring about the bottom line $$$$ and not the pt. It's just so frustrating...................I love Nursing as a career it has it's rewards, but Case Management has gotten weird, at least in Orange County, CA. HELP!
    Pam (rikkiroo2@yahoo.com

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    MsLove2U

    10 months ago

    6 comments

    Someone please forward my resume to any nurse recruiter with that attitude, so I can see if I am qualified for the "we want to hire you trend".