by
Heather Mayer, DOTmed News Reporter | September 10, 2010
“If we got anywhere near the funding physicians got, we wouldn’t have a shortage,” says Cheryl Peterson, director of the American Nurses Association’s Department of Nursing Practice and Policy.
A teaching shortage
When it comes to the inadequate number of nurses in the workforce, it’s not a sign of a lack of interest in the profession. It’s actually the opposite.

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“There is not enough faculty to teach people who want to be nurses,” says Rosseter. “It’s not that folks aren’t interested in becoming nurses — schools can’t handle the capacity.”
AACN reported that in 2008, U.S. nursing schools turned away nearly 50,000 nursing applicants due to a lack of faculty, clinical sites, classroom space and budget constraints. Nearly two-thirds of the nursing schools surveyed for the report cited faculty shortages as a reason for not accepting all qualified applicants.
Peterson calls the faculty shortage and the lack of funding for nursing programs a “big barrier” to increasing the workforce pool.
“We’re trying to ramp-up capacity, but we have these limitations of funding, faculty, sites,” she says. “We have the students...we don’t have the capacity to educate [them].”
“It takes awhile to produce faculty,” says Rosseter.
It takes nurses at least six years to complete their masters and eight years for a doctoral, not far behind physicians, making it impossible to address the shortage in the workforce immediately.
With educators still being educated, it’s not likely the nursing shortage will abate. According to a 2008 report from the Council on Physician and Nursing Supply, 30,000 additional nurses should graduate annually to meet the nation’s health care needs — an increase of 30 percent over the current number of annual graduates.
Nurses are baby boomers too
According to numbers from a 2006 Nursing Management Aging Workforce survey, 55 percent of nurses reported they plan to retire between 2011 and 2020.
Despite a slight easing of the shortage due to older nurses delaying retirement because of the recession, a 2009 article by Buerhaus in Health Affairs cited a rapidly aging workforce as a key contributor to the projected shortage.
“How do we retain [older nurses]?” asks ANA’s Peterson. “How do we keep an engaged older workforce?”
She offers suggestions, including better pension programs, better wages and a phased retirement plan, which would allow nurses to move from full-time to part-time before retiring completely.
In 2008, Peterson says, the average age of an employed registered nurse was 45.5, and generally, nurses retire around 55.