YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Faculty Shortages and Shortages in Nursing
Essays 1 - 30
up billboards offering cash incentives, while nursing schools also originated creative means of recruiting more students (Wells). ...
in nursing educators aged 36 to 45 (Lewallen, et al, 2003). To complicate matters further, recent statistics show that nurses wh...
nurses are part of this generation and a large majority of nurses are retiring. It has been estimated that 50 percent of the count...
educators in the past, are lured away from academia by better-paying positions in clinical and private practice (Mee, 2003). Furth...
nurses by 2012 to eliminate the shortage (Rosseter, 2009). By 2020, the District of Columbia along with at least 44 states will ha...
information about the shortage of nurses and the consequences. This was achieved as demonstrated in the following brief report of ...
established that nurses are often involved in the "timely identification of complications," which, if acted upon swiftly, prevent ...
divert status at least three times a week for the last year, with the exception of the only level one trauma center in Nevada, whi...
higher nurse-to-patient ratios suffer an increased rate of burnout and experience greater dissatisfaction with their jobs. In resp...
Roughly 50 percent of the current working nursing population will retire within the next 15 years (Mee and Robinson, 2003). Adding...
a drivable distance. This rural population currently exceeds 35 million in the country (America Telemedicine Association, 2007). ...
A pertinent issue to foreign nurse recruitment, as a method for alleviating the shortage of nurses in US hospitals, is the number ...
30 months, as this is when between 13 and 28 percent of senior nurses are due to retire (Sibbald, 2003). Currently, close to a thi...
(Green, 2004a). A travel nurse, on the other hand, is typically contracted to work a 13-week period, and this usually includes an ...
age. Therefore, the patient population is increasing. This factor is also influenced by the fact that that the huge lump in the Am...
Statistics expects that number to rise to more than one million in less than 20 years. The American Nurses Association and Monste...
be increased substantially, of course, by those immigrants families who would likely be admitted to the country as well. The inte...
Budget Office forecasts that gross domestic product will grow by 3.6 percent after inflation (in "real" terms) this year and by 3....
This essay is about proposed policies and legislation that addressed the nursing shortage. It also brings in proposed changed to M...
employability: The role of nurse educator requires an advanced practice nursing degree at the graduate levels of masters and docto...
that they are often asked to take care of more patients with higher acuity levels than they have in the past (Hassmiller and Cozin...
This research paper presents a comprehensive discussion of the American nursing shortage. A brief history of the shortage is prese...
This essay provides data regarding the shortage and turnover and causes for these events. The essay also discusses why there is a ...
that hospital nurse staffing levels are inadequate to provide safe and effective care" (DPE Research Department, 2003). Physicians...
change the position before completing three years of clinical practice (MacKusick and Minick, 2010). This research article is very...
available in the need for workers. There is also the consideration of the destruction it is taking place in the country and the ne...
In 2006, Ryan reported there was a serious shortage of principals in the entire Northeast region of the United States, encompassin...
In a paper consisting of six pages the shortage of white collar professionals in an ever changing workplace is examined and conten...
well. This study also appears to be sound scientifically. Its primary means of data analysis is statistical; the methods b...
Kanters position that the situational aspects of a working environment have the ability to influence worker attitudes and behavior...