Title: The evolving picture of nursing in the United States
1The evolving picture of nursing in the United
States
- Jane Kirschling, DNS, RN, FAAN
- Dean and Professor
- janek_at_email.uky.edu, 859-323-4857
- 2011 Maine Nursing Summit
- April 5
2Appreciation
- Amazing that Nursing Summit celebrating 10th
year - Very pleased to be back
- Part of leadership journey
- RWJF Executive Nurse
- Fellow (2000-2003)
3Objectives
- Describe how nursing shortage in U.S. has evolved
over past decade toward what is on the horizon - Discuss how roles of RNs and APRNs will evolve
over next decade - Identify competencies that RNs will need in order
to meet health care needs in America by 2020 - Identify preferred strategies for how nurses will
achieve and maintain desired competencies over
their careers
4Obj. 1 describe how nursing shortage in U.S.
has evolved over past decade toward what is on
the horizon
- High alert, to concern, to chronic shortage
5RN Population
- Findings from the 2008 National Sample Survey of
Registered Nurses (September 2010) - US Department of Health and Human Services Health
Resources and Services Administration - Maine sample 517 RNs
65 growth between 2004 and 2008
7Employed in nursing nationally 84.8, Maine
84.6
8- Median age of RNs, 46 years old, remained the
same between 2004 and 2008 - number of RNs under age 30 increased first time
three decades - ¼ RNs are nurses in 50s
955-59 years 65 full-time and 60-64 years 47.6
Not employed in nursing 12.5 (50-54 years),
14.9 (55-59), 29.1 (60-64), 50.4 (65-69)
10Since 1980 the largest percentage of RNs working
in hospitals was 68.2 (1984) and the low was
57.4 (2004), in 2008 62.5
11RNs salaries rose almost 15.9 since 2004,
slightly outpaced inflation
12Todays projection nationally
- Shortfall of RNs developing around 2018 and
growing to about 260,000 by 2025, twice as large
as any shortage since mid-1960s (Buerhaus, et
al., 2009) - 2006 HRSA projection, one million short by 2020
- Bureau of Labor Statistics analysts project more
than 581,000 new RN positions will be created
through 2018 (22 increase in the workforce) - Impact of healthcare reform
132009 employed RNs, NPs, and PAs per 100,000
population
14As recession continues mix of outcomes
(Buerhaus, et al., 2009)
- real RN wages unlikely to increase, as employers
(particularly hospitals) will not need to offer
pay hikes to induce employment - vacant RN positions will be filled, and many
hospitals will predict end to the nurse shortage - some new nursing graduates will experience
difficulty finding jobs - ADN graduates and time between graduating and
being hired has lengthened
15- nursing education programs could experience an
increase in demand, as some people are attracted
to the relative job security and earnings offered
in nursing seek to become RNs - capacity of some education programs could be
affected negatively by state budget cuts
16BSN enrollments
- 2009-2010 American Association of Colleges of
Nursing (AACN) - Enrollments entry-level BSN programs increased
5.7, down from 6.1 2009 - Enrollments RN to BSN programs increased 21.6
- 73,570 BSN graduates 51,039 entry-level and
22,531 RN to BSN
1754,000 qualified applications professional
nursing programs turned away in 2009, including
9,500 applications to masters and doctoral
degree programs
18- loss of RN jobs as hospitals face losses in
investment income, increases in numbers of
uninsured patients, and decreases in elective
procedures
19Risk employers and policymakers see nursing
problem as over
easing or end to the current shortage brought
about by the recession gives employers and nurses
a chance to catch their breath and focus their
efforts on addressing the implications of the
changing composition of the RN workforce
(Buerhaus et al., 2009)
2010 Tri-Council of Nursing raised serious
concerns about slowing production of RNs
20Obj. 2 discuss how roles of RNs and APRNs will
evolve over next decade
- 2011 IOM report The Future of Nursing Leading
Change, Advancing Health - National Consensus Model APRN
21Nursing has an unprecedented opportunity to have
one voice on behalf of patient care
- 18 member committee
- Donna E. Shalala (Chair), President, University
of Miami - Linda Burnes Bolton (Vice Chair), Vice President
and Chief Nursing Officer, Cedars-Sinai Health - Evidence based
- IOM part of National Academy of Sciences
- private, nonprofit, self-perpetuating society of
distinguished scholars engaged in scientific and
engineering research, dedicated to the
furtherance of science and technology and to
their use for the general welfare
22changing landscape of health care system and
changing profile of population require that the
system undergo a fundamental shift (IOM, 2011, p.
86-87)
All health care professionals practice to full
extent education, training, and competencies
Quality, Access, Value
Foster Interprofessional Collaboration
23IOM Key Message
RECOMMENDATION NO. 4
24Rationale (p. 169-170)
- Several studies support significant association
between educational level of RN and outcomes for
patients in acute care settings, including
mortality - Other studies argue that clinical experience,
qualifications between entering a nursing program
(e.g., SAT scores), and the number of
BSN-prepared RNs that received an earlier degree
confound the value added through the 4-year
educational program
25- This debate aside, an all-BSN workforce at the
entry-level would provide a more uniform
foundation for the reconceptualized roles for
nurses and new models of care - vision for a transformed health care system(p.
22) - makes quality care accessible to the diverse
population of the United States, - intentionally promotes wellness and disease
prevention, - provides compassionate care across the lifespan
- prevention and primary care central drivers
26- NURSING ROLES RNs and APRNs provide primary
care across variety of settings, need to fully
actualize - health promotion
- education
- assessment
- NURSING ROLES need strong public health
infrastructure to care for people where they
live, work, play, and study - nurses will need to form new partnerships with
community leaders and have strong community care
competencies, such as ability to develop,
implement, and access culturally sensitive
interventions (p. 59)
- NURSING ROLES coordinating care traditional
strength - Care coordinators
- Health coaches, help people stay healthy
- Systems innovators, do their own work and look
for ways to improve individual and system
performance
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2920.8 additional degrees, BSN 12.1
21.6 advanced degrees
30Maine (NSSRN) RNs employed in nursing by
highest nursing or nursing-related education
(2008)
31IOM Key Message
RECOMMENDATION NO. 1
32Health care reform
- Survey published JAMA September 2008, only 2
fourth-year medical students plan to work in
primary care after graduation, despite need for
40 increase in number of primary care physicians
in the U.S. by 2020 - Association of American Medical Colleges predicts
shortage of 46,000 primary care physicians by
2025 - Expanded opportunities for APRNs
33Removing barriers
- Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation January 2010 Who
will provide primary care and how will they be
trained? - physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician
assistants in primary care, state and national
legal, regulatory, and reimbursement policies
should be changed to remove barriers that make it
difficult for nurse practitioners and physician
assistants to serve as primary care providers and
leaders of patient-centered medical homes or
other models of primary care delivery
34- AARP March 2010 http//www.aarp.org/makeadifferenc
e/advocacy/GovernmentWatch/Nursing/articles/provid
ing_nurses_we_need.html - Remove the numerous federal legislative and
regulatory barriers that prevent advanced
practice registered nurses from fully using their
skills to provide services within Federal health
programs. - Tipping point with consumers weighing in
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37Consensus Model
- Consensus Model for APRN Regulation Licensure,
Accreditation, Certification Education (July
7, 2008) - Available at http//www.aacn.nche.edu/education/pd
f/APRNReport.pdf
38Reasons for a Future APRN Model
- Lack common definitions related to APRN roles
- Lack of standardization in programs leading to
APRN preparation - Proliferation of specialties and subspecialties
- Examples Palliative Care NP, Cardiovascular CNS,
Homeland Security NP - Lack of common legal recognition across
jurisdictions
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41AACN members endorse DNP
- 2004, AACNs members endorsed Position Statement
on the Practice Doctorate in Nursing 4 years of
dialogue with array of stakeholders and
opportunities for comment - Target goal for transitioning APRN programs from
the masters to DNP by 2015 - Position identified the DNP as the appropriate
degree for advanced nursing practice or specialty
preparation, including four APRN roles (NP, CNS,
CRNA, CNM)
42IOM Key Message
RECOMMENDATION NO. 5
43- Additional 106 DNP programs in planning stages,
enrollment grew 35.3 last year, 7,034 students - Enrollment in PhD nursing programs increased
10.4 (434 students), 73 research focused BSN to
doctoral programs, 13 under development
44Enrollments increasing in both DNP and PhD
programs (1997-2009)
AACN 2009 over 9,500 applicants turned away
masters and doctoral programs
45Obj. 3 - identify competencies that RNs will need
in order to meet health care needs in America by
2020
- AACN Essentials for Baccalaureate Education
- Core Competencies for Interprofessional
Collaborative Practice
46Essential 1
- Recognize solid base in liberal education
(sciences arts) provides cornerstone for
practice and education of nurses - Strong emphases on development of personal
values system that includes capacity to make and
act upon ethical judgments - hallmark of liberal
education (Essentials, p. 11)
47Essential 2
- Basic organization and systems leadership for
quality care and patient safety - Understand and use quality improvement concepts,
processes, and outcomes measures - Safety minimization risk of harm to patients
and providers through both system effectiveness
and individual performance (Essentials, p. 13)
48Essential 3
- Scholarship for evidence-based practice
- Basic understanding how evidence is developed,
including research process, clinical judgment,
interprofessional perspectives, and patient
preference as applied to practice
49Diffusion of Knowledge (Hughes, 2008)
Source EA Balas SA Boren, Managing Clinical
Knowledge for Health Care Improvement. Yearbook
of Medical informatics 2002
50Why evidence? (Hughes, 2008)
- Evidence-based guidelines
- Reduce inappropriate variations in practice
- Promote high-quality care
- Accountability
- Evidence-based practice culture
- Better decision-making, grounded in scientific
knowledge - Decision-making process includes
- Research evidence
- Patient preferences
- Available resources
- Clinical expertise
- Central to the ability to deliver safe,
effective, and patient-centered care
51Essential 4
- Information management and application of patient
care technology - Computer and information literacy are crucial
improvement of cost effectiveness and safety
depend on evidence-based practice, outcomes
research, interprofessional care coordination,
and electronic medical record (Essentials, p. 17)
52Essential 5
- Healthcare policy, finance, and regulatory
environments - Solid understanding
- Broader context of health care, how patient care
services are organized and financed and how
reimbursement is structured - Scope and role of regulatory agencies
- Development healthcare policy and how to change
53Health Care Spending US Gross Domestic Product
HC largest sector, 5.5 education
Consumers pay half, government pays rest
- Congressional Budget Office about half of all
growth health care spending in past several
decades associated with changes in medical care
made possible by advances in technology - Other higher income levels, changes in insurance
coverage, rising prices
54Essential 6
- Interprofessional communication and collaboration
for improving patient health outcomes - Definition shared goals
- Clear role expectations of members
- Flexible decision-making process
- Establish open communication patterns and
leadership
gt Fundamental effective interprofessional
collaboration
55Essential 7
- Clinical prevention and population health
- Individually focused interventions such as
immunizations, screenings, and counseling aimed
at prevention - Aggregate, community, or population health
promotion and disease prevention
56Essential 8
- Professionalism and professional values
- Inherent in accountability is responsibility for
individual actions and behaviors, including
civility (fundamental set accepted behaviors for
society/culture upon which professional behaviors
are based)
57Essential 9
- Baccalaureate generalist nursing practice
- Practice focused outcomes that integrate
knowledge, skills, and attitudes delineated in
Essentials 1-8 into nursing care of individuals,
families, groups, communities, and populations in
variety of settings
- Roles
- Provider of care
- Designer/ manager/ coordinator of care
- Member of a profession
58Interprofessional Team-Based Competencies
- IPEC Expert Panel Presentation
- February 16, 2011 Invitation Conference HRSA,
Macy Foundation, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation,
and ABIM Foundation - Amy Blue, PhD
- Jane Kirschling, DNS, RN, FAAN
- Madeline Schmitt, PhD, RN, FAAN-Chair
- Thomas Viggiano, MD, MEd
59IPEC Interprofessional Education Collaborative
- American Association of Colleges of Nursing
- American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic
Medicine - American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy
- American Dental Education Association
- Association of American Medical Colleges
- Association of Schools of Public Health
60IPEC Charge to Expert Panel
- Recommend a common core set of competencies
relevant across the professions to address the
essential preparation of clinicians for
interprofessional collaborative practice - Recommend learning experiences and educational
strategies for achieving the competencies and
related objectives
61Definitions Interprofessional Education and
Interprofessional Collaborative Practice
- IPE When students from two or more professions
learn about, from and with each other to enable
effective collaboration and improve health
outcomes (WHO, 2010) - ICP When multiple health workers from different
professional backgrounds work together with
patients, families, carers, and communities to
deliver the highest quality of care (WHO, 2010)
62IP Competencies General Criteria
- Patient and population-centered
- Relationship-centered
- Process-oriented
- Stated in common language
- Applicable across practice settings
- Applicable across professions
- Relevant to the learning continuum
- Outcome driven performance
- Relevant to all of IOMs goals for
improvement-patient-centered above, efficiency,
effectiveness, safety, timeliness, and equity
63Provide Patient- Centered Care
Utilize Informatics
Work in Interprofessional Teams? Core
Competencies
Employ Evidence- Based Practice
Apply Quality Improvement
IOM 5 core competencies, adapted to IPEC Expert
Panel Work
64Values/ Ethics
Roles/ Responsibilities
Work in Interprofessional Teams? 4 Core
Competencies
Teamwork
Communication
Teamwork competencies, adapted to IPEC Expert
Panel Work
65Values/EthicsOverall Competency
- Work with individuals of other professions
- to maintain a climate of mutual respect
- and shared values
66Values/Ethics Example competencies
- Place the interests of patients and populations
at the center of interprofessional health care
delivery - Recognize and respect the unique cultures,
values, roles/responsibilities and expertise of
other health professions
67Roles ResponsibilitiesOverall Competency
- Use the knowledge of ones own role
- and those of other professions
- to appropriately assess and address
- the health care needs of the patients
- and populations served
68 Roles ResponsibilitiesExample Competencies
- Recognize ones limitations in skills, knowledge
and abilities and engage others when appropriate - Engage diverse health care professionals who
complement ones own professional expertise, as
well as associated resources, to develop
strategies to meet specific patient care needs
69Interprofessional Communication Overall
Competency
- Communicate with patients, families, communities
and other health professionals in a responsive
and responsible manner that supports a - team approach to the maintenance of
- health and treatment of disease
70Interprofessional Communication Example
Competencies
- Organize and communicate information with
patients, families and health care team members
in a form and format that is understandable,
avoiding discipline-specific terminology when
possible - Give timely, sensitive, instructive feedback to
others about their performance on the team, and
respond respectfully as a team member to feedback
from others
71Interprofessional Teamwork Team-based Care
Overall Competency
- Apply relationship-building values
- and the principles of team dynamics
- to perform effectively in different team roles to
plan and deliver patient/population-centered care
that is safe, timely, - efficient, effective, and equitable
72Interprofessional Teamwork Team-based Care
Example Competencies
- Integrate the knowledge and experience of other
professions-appropriate to the specific care
situation-to inform care decisions, while
respecting patient and community values and
priorities/preferences for care - Use process improvement strategies to increase
the effectiveness of interprofessional teamwork
and team-based care
73Obj. 4 - identify preferred strategies for how
nurses will achieve and maintain desired
competencies over their careers
742009 IOM study Redesigning Continuing Education
in the Health Professions
- major flaws in the way continuing education is
conducted, financed, regulated, and evaluated - evidence base underlying current continuing
education is fragmented and underdeveloped - Called for new vision of professional development
that enables learning both individually and from
collaborative, team perspective
75IOM Key Message
RECOMMENDATION NO. 6
76- Accrediting bodies, schools of nursing, health
care organizations, and continuing competency
educators from multiple health professions should
collaborate to ensure that nurses and nursing
students and faculty continue their education and
engage in lifelong learning to gain the
competencies needed to provide care for diverse
populations across the lifespan
77Faculty partner with health care organizations
- Develop and prioritize competencies so curricula
updated regularly across all programs - go beyond task-based proficiencies to
higher-level competencies - demonstrate mastery over care management
knowledge domains - provide foundation decision-making skills under
variety clinical situations across care settings
78Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education and
National League for Nursing Accrediting Commission
- Require all nursing students demonstrate
comprehensive set of clinical performance
competencies
79Academic administrators
- Require all faculty
- participate continuing professional development
- Perform cutting-edge competence in practice,
teaching, and research
80Health care organizations and schools of nursing
- Foster culture of lifelong learning
- Provide resources for interprofessional
continuing competency programs - If offer continuing competency programs,
regularly evaluate for adaptability, flexibility,
accessibility, and impact on clinical outcomes
81IOM Key Message
RECOMMENDATION NO. 3
New graduates and nurses in transition
82in conclusion
- Dont lose sight of evolving nursing shortage
- Commit to take action on recommendations from IOM
report, this is about patient-centered care and
health care reform, essential that nurses
mobilize - Actively pursue meaningful partnerships between
education and practice - Commit to continuing competence and
interprofessional care
83Questions and comments
- again, appreciate this opportunity and your
thoughtful attention
84References
- AHRQ Rhonda G. Hughes, PhD, MHS, RN, Senior
Health Scientist Administrator, Evidence-based
patient safety quality improvement The nursing
imperative, American Association of Colleges of
Nursing, Doctoral Conference, January 2008 - American Association of Colleges of Nursing.
(2008). The essentials of baccalaureate
education for professional nursing practice.
Washington, DC AACN. http//www.aacn.nche.edu/edu
cation/pdf/BaccEssentials08.pdf - Buerhaus, P.I., Auerbach, D.I., Staiger, D.O.
(2009). The recent surge in nurse employment
Causes and implications. Health Affairs, 28(4),
W657-68 - Institute of Medicine. (2009). Redesigning
continung education in the health professions.
Washington, DC That National Academies Press - Institute of Medicine. (2011). The Future of
Nursing Leading Change, Advancing Health.
Washington, DC The National Academies Press - U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Health Resources and Services Administration.
(September 2010) The Registered Nurse Population
Findings from the 2008 National Sample Survey of
Registered Nursing. http//bhpr.hrsa.gov/healthwor
kforce/rnsurvey/2008/nssrn2008.pdf - World Health Organization (WHO). Framework for
Action on Interprofessional Education
Collaborative Practice Winter 2010
http//www.who.int/hrh/resources/framework_action/
en/index.html