WASHINGTON — The U.S. healthcare system is pinched by a persistent nursing shortage that threatens the quality of patient care even as tens of thousands of people are turned away from nursing schools, according to experts. The shortage has drawn the attention of President Barack Obama. During a White House meeting on Thursday to promote his promised healthcare system overhaul, Obama expressed alarm over the notion that the United States might have to import trained foreign nurses because so many U.S. nursing jobs are unfilled. Democratic U.S. Representative Lois Capps, a former school nurse, said meaningful healthcare overhaul cannot occur without fixing the nursing shortage. ‘Nurses deliver healthcare,’ Capps said in a telephone interview. An estimated 116,000 registered nurse positions are unfilled at U.S. hospitals and nearly 100,000 jobs go vacant in nursing homes, experts said. The shortage is expected to worsen in coming years as the 78 million people in the post-World War Two baby boom generation begin to hit retirement age. An aging population requires more care for chronic illnesses and at nursing homes. ‘The nursing shortage is not driven by a lack of interest in nursing careers. The bottleneck is at the […]
Monday, March 9th, 2009
U.S. Healthcare System Pinched by Nursing Shortage
Author: WILL DUNHAM
Source: Reuters
Publication Date: Sun Mar 8, 2009 8:10am EDT
Link: U.S. Healthcare System Pinched by Nursing Shortage
Source: Reuters
Publication Date: Sun Mar 8, 2009 8:10am EDT
Link: U.S. Healthcare System Pinched by Nursing Shortage
Stephan: This is how absolutely off the rails the illness profit industry has gone. Think about what this article is saying.