Investment
Opportunity Nurture
nursing education now to secure the future of the profession
By Carol Bradley, MSN, RN,
California Editor
February 26, 2003
There is no doubt that nursing education is racing to the future as fast
as nursing practice. If we want more nurses and better-educated nurses
at the bedside in California, it is important to understand the challenges
that confront our educational system and how we can help our colleagues
who are working as hard as they can to educate tomorrow's nurses.
Despite record numbers of applications and increasing financial support
by hospitals for California's schools of nursing, enrollment continues
to be severely limited by inadequate faculty resources and a general lack
of support for nursing education by the leadership of our community colleges
and universities. They simply do not have the sense of urgency that we
have, despite the considerable advocacy efforts of our nursing deans,
directors and faculty. The ultimate (and expensive) ripple effect of our
shrinking nursing workforce is simply not understood by educational administrators
and policy-makers. Even our governor and Legislature have failed to provide
the appropriate level of support to address California's nursing educational
crisis.
Recent experience with successful hospital-academic relationships has
taught us that a relatively small investment in our nursing programs can
dramatically affect enrollment capacity. As individual nurses, we need
to deliver the message to decision-makers that the expansion of our nursing
educational pipeline is critical to the health and well-being of our health
care delivery system, as well as to every citizen of the state.
You may be wondering what you can do. Here are some suggestions:
If you already have students within your workplace, welcome them with
open arms and ensure they are exposed to nursing practice that embraces
accountability and excellence. Support and guide students and their
clinical faculty. Make room within your work unit for as many students
as you can possibly handle. Schools are having trouble finding clinical
sites for their students.
If you do not have students within your workplace, work with your
employer to call the colleges and universities within your community
and offer yourself and your patients to them. Affiliation contracts
are easy to negotiate; you should be able to have students by next semester.
Faculty shortages are severe, so if you have an interest in teaching,
combine your job with a part-time clinical instructor role at a local
nursing program. Your clinical skills and enthusiasm for nursing practice
will prove invaluable to new nursing students.
Student attrition levels are rising; get your colleagues together and
create a mentoring program for nursing students who rotate through your
workplace.
Do you work with LVNs or other staff that would make great nurses?
Help them access your employer's tuition assistance program and be their
champion as they apply and work through their classes to become a nurse.
Did you go to nursing school in California? If so, call your alumni
association and find out to whom you can send a letter of concern. Ask
your school's president/administrator to increase capacity in their
nursing program.
Write your legislator and governor. Tell them nursing is in crisis
and they need to legislate the expansion of nursing education. The UC,
CSU and community college systems need to see nursing as a priority
program. If a university invests in a medical school, they should be
investing in nursing. Schools also need to ensure that nursing faculty
salaries are competitive within the marketplace of nursing.
Yes, each of us can make a difference. If we each put a little effort
into building our own workforce, perhaps there will be someone there to
fill our shoes when we retire.