The nursing workforce crisis has improved slightly since the pandemic, but is far from ending. A new investigation of the National Council of State Nursing Boards (NCSBN) shows that nurses are still fighting the high levels of exhaustion and job extraction, and that many of the issues plan to leave the field because this.
The report is based on a survey of more than 800,000 US nurses. He found that nursing employment levels have been recovered slightly since 2022, with 87.7% or RN graduates and 70.6% or LPN/VN graduates now activated.
The NCSBN investigation also found that more than 138,000 nurses have abandoned the workforce since 2022, and report the same reasons to do so that NCSBN surveyed them two years ago: stress, exhaustion and retirement.
Looking towards the future, the survey results showed that 40% of nurses have plans to leave the professional in the next five years. This raises concerns about how the country’s nursing scarcity will see in the future, especially as the population continues to age and sick.
During the last five years or so, exhaustion and high workloads associated with inadequate personnel levels have been important factors that led nurses to leave the field, NCSBN director, NCSBN research director. This new report revealed that violence in the workplace and inappropriate wages are also becoming key factors, he said.
These problems are prior to the pandemic, but were exacerbated by IT, and suppliers organizations are still presenting strategies to solve thesis problems, Martin said.
But suppliers seem to have progressed in this regard, Martin said, highlighting that major nurses seem to return to the workforce.
After a great duration of the fall, the height of the pandemic (2020-2022), the proportion of nurses over 55 years in the workforce was recovered in 2024, from a minimum of 31% to 40% in 2022. More than 100,000 experienced nurses returned to the professional, Martin, Martin said.
This trend suggests that working conditions have improved enough for many experienced nurses to feel safe and supported again, he said.
“But there was a parallel trend with that: his significantly high intention of retiring in the next five years. Is that where he gives us a bit of a senior while we think about sustainable that this balario is?
He also pointed out that the intention to abandon the world of nursing is still high in all age groups, not just old nurses. If this trend continues, it could lead to decades of lost work of younger nurses and contribute to the instability of the long -term workforce, Martin warned.
Recruitment is not the problem, it was noticed.
Between 150,000 and 200,000 nurses enter the workforce every year. In his eyes, the key challenge, retention, partly among experienced nurses.
“The offer in the front of the workforce of the workforce is very robust and very sustainable. What I think needs more attention is the retention of the current workforce, and that is where it is in the policies, at the employer level, federal level and state level, address things such as violence in the workplace and harassment, salary, high workloads, low staff, etc.”, Martin explained.
He sees this moment as a cautious turning point. There are reasons for hope, but only intentional collaboration efforts, suppliers, policy formulators, regulators and educators, can make recovery lasting for the nursing workforce.
Without that, nursing personnel could reach crisis levels in a few years as retirement accelerate and unresolved work stressors persist, Martin said.
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