Showing posts with label health care crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health care crisis. Show all posts

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Quick! I need a nurse!

     There is a growing shortage of nurses, you may or may not have heard, but the health care world is scrambling to figure out both short term and long term solutions. Some have projected the shortage to reach 260,000 registered nurses by the year 2025. So what has caused this, and how do we fix it?

     The first cause is the aging nurse population. According to the 2008 National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses released in September 2010 by the federal Division of Nursing, the average age of the RN population in 2008 was 46 years of age, and nurses in their 50's are expected to become the largest segment of the nursing population. As many as one quarter of all nurses are expected to retire in the next two decades. The second cause is a lack of enough new nurses to replace the retiring ones, let alone to fill all the new positions being created by our aging baby boomer population. We are not making nurses fast enough to fill our ever increasing needs. However, U.S. nursing schools turned away over 67,500 qualified applicants in 2010-2011 because they don't have the faculty to train them. And it's no wonder why nurses don't want to be teachers- we make much more money working as nurses, and don't have the added stress of a student working under our license. Furthermore, the lack of nurses causes insufficient staffing at facilities; raising the stress level and decreasing job satisfaction for those nurses that are working-prompting them to leave the field entirely.

     So how do we fix this problem? First of all we need more nurse educators. They should be paid well, this is, perhaps, the most important job in our society. They are training nurses how to care for people, and nurses are special in that they are the most knowledgeable person that will be with the patient on an hourly basis. We are often the first to spot a problem, and we are the last barrier to mistakes in patient care. Nurse educators should be highly esteemed. Second, we need to raise awareness in the general public so that those who are looking for a good, secure profession are aware of the need for nurses. Since 2002, Johnson and Johnson has a great campaign going to raise awareness of the nursing profession, more companies, especially health care companies should follow their example. Third, we need better work environments for nurses, and where that is not possible-better compensation for the overworked nurses.

     Nursing is a stressful job in it's very nature. Caring for another is exhausting-just ask any mother. Nurses often deal with life and death situations, and with people who are cantankerous because they don't feel well. But for most of us nurses, our passion is helping people and that is it's own reward. This enables us to keep going to work, while hoping that there is an end to the shortage soon so that we can improve the quality of the care we give each day.

Monday, August 29, 2011

This is Crazy...

The entire health care system in the United States is out of control. Insurance companies are unable to control their costs, doctors are unable to control patient care, the government is unable to control their aid programs, and the individual feels unable to control anything!

Costs have been artificially inflated while insurance companies have cut deals with providers and medcaid flat out refuses to cover the actual cost of treatments. Billing for care has become a nightmare industry with health organizations trying to get more and insurance companies trying to pay less. The individual is left to bridge an ever widening gap with co-pays and coinsurance and 80/20 versus 70/30 or 90/10. The average individual could not hope to understand all the nuances without the help of an expert in the industry, but we are all asked every year to review our insurance and make any changes or "new elections" necessary. Then, heaven forbid, we end up in the emergency room and agree to all the tests the doctor suggests not having any idea how much it will cost us in the end (and neither does the doctor, by the way). Is there any other such purchase that we would approve before we knew the total? It would be considered ridiculous to purchase a car without knowing the cost before driving it away; and even more ridiculous to drive away and then refuse to pay the full cost!

We, as individuals, must step up and demand to be informed. We should know what our health care costs, truly costs not just costs us; and we should make educated decisions concerning the direction of our care. Just as we have the right to be fully informed about our health care decisions; we have the responsibility to make informed choices directing our care.