Nursing shortage: Here is what some Hospitals are doing
Sam Khan,MD
Copy right: medjobcity Inc.
02/2004.
Nursing shortage have been an issue for sometime now in
the country. The causes are varied and have been discussed in
many articles in the recent past.
The purpose of this article is to explore the strategies US
Hospitals are employing to overcome the nurse shortage.
The remedy of a problem is dependent on its cause. This is no
different here. Since the causes of shortage of nurses are
varied the possible solutions proposed are many too. Nurse
shortage stems from lesser number of students choosing nursing
as profession ,
Uncertainty created by a wrong research report in 1988 by a
reputable organization predicting impending nurse oversupply
(resulting in students deciding not to chose nursing), more
nurses choosing to work in out patient setting creating a mal
distribution of nurses in some areas of the country ,
dissatisfaction among nurses because of shift work, mandatory
overtime, insufficient pay, lack of a career ladder are some of
the common causes.
Many nurses are choosing Temp. work as it pays more money and
allows some control over work hours and benefits.
In the private sector the turnover is higher then in the govt.
sector.
Hospitals are doing all sorts of things to recruit and retain
the nurses.
Financial incentives to recruit nurses are temporary fix in
general. These do not guarantee retention of the nurse in the
same facility.
Long term planning for this national problem is addressed by
federal as well as state level. These will have effect though
not in very near future.
A serious effort by the hospitals, nurses themselves as well as
the government and the nursing organizations will be needed.
Image building , making the profession attractive are the sort
of things which will take time but will have lasting effects.
For the short term it is the hospitals which have to deal with
the nursing shortage.
The latest news is that some nurses who are in army reserves are
now being called in for active duty and sent to Germany (3 from
our institution).
There are not many innovative strategies available to hospitals
to deal with the shortage of nursing staff.
Here are some ways different health care organizations and
hospitals are dealing with this nursing emergency:
(These strategies are for recruitment of new nurses, new
graduates as well for retention of existing workforce. Some
strategies are short term and some are long term. Your
institution or hospital may already be employing many of these
methods.)
Commonly employed strategies to attract and retain nurses in the
organization include:
•Signing referral bonuses
•Salary incentives
•Flexible hours.
•Lower eligibility threshold for benefits.
•Improvement in working conditions.
•Increase recruitment in training programs.
•Recruitment outside of prime age.
•Identify cost effective and quality based practice models
that promote quality patient outcomes and job satisfaction.
•Accommodate aging nurse force.
•Image building of nursing staff.
•Assign responsibilities and challenges for motivated members
of nursing staff .
•Create role models for junior nursing staff members.
•Promote leadership development programs.
Baptist Hospital of Miami, Florida is employing following
strategies for some time with good success.
•Sign-on Bonuses offered to all RNs and Out-of-Area Applicants
($5,000 and
$2,500)
•On-Campus Recruitment Twice a Year at each of Four Local
Nursing Schools
•System-Wide Posting of all Job Openings
•On-site Child Care Center.
•Post Office.
•Choice of multiple health plans
•Group Legal Insurance.
•Leave Sharing (PTO donations to employees in need)
•Larger and more frequent advertising in Local Newspaper and
Nursing Journals
•Special Annual Ads (i.e. Florida Hospital Association Guide,
RN Magazine, AJN).
•Commercial Internet Postings.
•Special Nursing Limited-Time Offer ($5,000 and $2,500)
•Nursing Recruitment & Retention Committee
•Birthday Cards from Human Resources with 2 Movie Tickets
•Employee Activity Committee Events
•Regular Bonuses of $1,000 and $500
•Year-end Raffle for "Trip for Two"
•Stepped-Up Publicity of the vacancies (posters, brochures,
raffle boxes)
• Employees Referrals program (RN Hires through employees
referral program increased from 28% to 31% after
Introduction of Program).
•Relocation Assistance offered
•Extra Pay Option (in lieu of benefits).
•Staffing Incentive Bonus Programs (including $25 gift
certificates)
•Special Weekend Scheduling Option ($7/hr diff)
•Supplemental Weekend Plan ($3/hr diff)
•Increased Base Rates and Per Diem Rates
•Guaranteed Overtime
•Preceptor Honorarium ($200)
•Special Call Back Pay (%20 or time and a half)
•Thanksgiving, Christmas & New Years Holiday Pay (time and
a half)
•Annual Spring Luncheon for Graduating Nurses (all colleges)
•Pay for NCLEX Review Course
•Nursing Student Clinical Rotations and Practicums at
Hospital.
•Students Hired as Nurse Care Techs at Top of Pay Scale until
Graduation
•Nurse Care Techs Recruited into New Graduate Training Program
•Professional Advancement Process (Clinical Ladder).
•Leadership Development Program
•Mentorship Program
•Tuition Assistance
•Toolbook for Performance (clinical, professional &
personal development
courses).
•Employee Assistance Program.
•On-site Credit Union / ATMs.
•On-site Dry Cleaning, Hair Salon, Shoe Repair, Car Wash,
Pharmacy, Gift Shop,
•Meals-To-Go Program (from Employee Dining Room).
.
•Dental Insurance.
•Vision care.
•Life/AD&D/Dependent Life.
•Short and Long Term Disability.
•Flexible Spending Accounts.
Wellness Program
•Employee Health Services
•On-Site Fitness Centers
•Lectures, Training & Workshops
•Massage Therapy
Vacation, Leave & Time Off
•Paid Time Off (personal, sick, holidays) with annual cash-out
option
•Extended Illness Bank
•Family & Medical Leaves
•Personal Leaves
•Bereavement Leave
•Paid Military Leave
•Sunshine Fund (no interest loan & donations to employees
in need)
•Pension Plan with Employer Matching Contributions
•Adoption Benefit (up to $4,000)
•Credit Union (free checking, low cost loans)
Traditional benefit packages are not always sufficiently
alluring to nurses. It is possible that employee benefits could
be used more effectively to retain nurses and reduce costly
staff turnovers
One example is payroll reduction program commonly known as 125
Reimbursement Plan. Using this plan the employee can allocate a
pre tax dollar amount per year which is anticipated as potential
expense to cover health and welfare expense.
The employer avoids having to match FICA tax and workman
compensation expense by reducing the amount of income upon which
these figures are calculated.
Not only does the employee net take home pay increases but the
employers matching FICA taxes and related pay roll expenses are
reduced (consult your tax advisor for more details on this
program).
Employee’s Voice
•Annual Employee Survey
•Roundtables with CEO, VPs
•System and Divisional Townhall Meetings
•Staff Meetings & Committees
•Reward & Recognition Task Force
•Roving Cart (suggestion box)
•Nurse Week Activities
•VP Rounds on Nursing Units (all shifts) during Weeks On-Call
and for Special
•Employee of the Month and Year Awards
•Employee Service Awards
•5&10 year plaques
•15 year dinner
•20+ year banquet
•Special Performance Awards - Recognition at Annual Employee
Service Awards
Dinner
•Celebrate, Motivate and Decorate Task Force
Collaborative efforts between health care organizations,
societies, hospitals , private sector.
Some examples:
•In San Diego, six hospital systems have committed $1.3
million to support a program called, "Nurses Now",
which will add faculty and additional student slots to San Diego
University.
•The American Hospital Association News reports that in
Laredo, Texas, a hospital CEO worked with Texas A&M
University to develop a four-year bachelor's program and is
providing $425,000 in scholarships to local students over the
next five years.
•In Morris County, New Jersey, the Board of Freeholders
offered scholarships to students who agreed to work in a long
term care facility.
•The Dallas-Fort Worth Hospital Council raised $600,000 to
expand student enrollment at local schools.
Magnet Hospitals: This elite class of hospitals generally do not
have problem with high nurse turn over and recruitment. These
classes of hospital (only 1-2 % of all US Hospitals) attain and
keep this designation only if they meet stringent standards and
ongoing 4 yearly evaluations.
"The label 'Magnet hospitals' originally was given to a
group of U.S. hospitals that were able to successfully recruit
and retain professional nurses during a national nursing
shortage in the early 1980s. Studies of Magnet hospitals
highlight the leadership characteristics and professional
practice attributes of nurses within these organizations...
Hospitals selected met the following criteria: 1) nurses within
the hospitals considered them good places to practice nursing,
2) the hospitals had low turnover and vacancy rates, and 3) the
hospitals were located in areas where there was significant
regional competition for nursing services." (JONA, January
1999). Magnet designated health care organizations consistently
outperform their peers in recruiting and retaining nurses,
resulting in increased stability in patient care systems across
the organization.
Foreign nurses/Importing nurses.
Philippines is the largest source of foreign nurses. Nurses from
many other countries including Europe have come recently and in
last many years to work in the US.
WWW.CGFNS.ORG is a US based agency that has the authority
currently to screen foreign nurses for eligibility for state
licensing boards and work visas.
Acquiring the services of foreign nurses is not new in the US.
Recently the number of non-US origin nurses has increased
significantly.
A number of hospitals are using programs to hire foreign nurses.
This is not an easy task as the process is tedious and takes
months and may be years.
CGFNS (Commission on graduates of foreign nursing schools) is
one source of information for this process. Hospitals generally
use recruiters specializing in this
area and immigration lawyers to hire foreign nurses. Foreign
nurses have to show that their training is adequate, they are
proficient in English language and are eligible for visa
otherwise
To summarize it seems that the major influences on recruitment
and retention are salary and raises, benefits, shift rotations
and scheduling flexibility , staff communications , tuition
reimbursements, type of nursing care delivery system, nursing
leadership, reputation of the hospital and responsive
management.
Copy right Medjobcity inc.
Author: Sam Khan, MD
info@medjobcity.com
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About the Author
I own medjobcity.com, a website site for health care jobs and
career information.I am a practicing physician in Pennsylvania
and medjobcity.com is my 2nd job.I like to write on career
related issues in health care.
Written by: Sam Khan,MD
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