Archive for the ‘Nursing Shortage’ Category

Letters not printed

I’ve got a pretty good track record in getting letters to the editor published – if I say so myself.  Every now and then I send a letter that I think is particularly important, especially when it is correcting misinformation, doesn’t seem to make the “cut”.  When this happens I sometimes decide to post it on my blog, and this is what I’ve done with a copy of the letter to the editor that I sent in response to an Pasadena Star News editorial piece they published on the nursing education and nursing shortage challenge.  Though overall the article made a valiant attempt to present solutions, I also found at least one glaring error and many of the same old-same old problems and solutions that the nursing talking heads have been nattering about for almost as long as I’ve been a registered nurse.  However, the Pasadena Star News paper letter to the editor person felt that my response was too long to print and after he suggested that I might want to consider editing it down and “tightening” it up I should resend it, which I did.  Alas, neither letter has been published to date.  So below you’ll find both versions of my letter to the editor the first is the original followed by the much revised and edited down version of the second submission.

September 22, 2008

Letters to the Editor
Pasadena Star News
Pasadena, CA

Re: “Make room for nurses”

Dear Editor:

Your paper’s effort to address the layered and complicated issues surrounding our Nation’s nursing shortage and nursing education dilemma is commendable; but unfortunately like so many well-intentioned individuals and groups before you, your efforts fell short and your editorial also provided erroneous information.

The Associate-prepared RN does not receive a certificate but receives an Associate Degree of Science in Nursing.  The three recognized pathways to an RN licensure are as follows the Associate-prepared (often referred to as the two-year degree), the Diploma-nurse (often referred to as the three-year program) and the Bachelor-prepared (often referred to as the four-year degree).  All three pathways require that their candidates take the same licensure exam, the N.C.L.E.X.-RN, and once this exam is passed that individual is then eligible for licensure, assuming they meet the state other licensure pre-requisites.

An LVN, though a nurse, is not a RN and not one of the three pathways to an RN licensure.  The LVN licensure has its own scope of practice, is a separate educational and licensure pathway, and in California is regulated by its own nursing board.  The LVN can be and is recognized as part of the nursing career ladder, and many excellent RNs, nursing leaders and educators have begun their career as either a LVN or LPN, before moving up the career ladder to advance training, degrees and licensure.

Many external factors impact our nursing education pipeline, some of which you noted in your article.  However your editorial failed to address issues such as the low student to instructor ratio which is mandated (in some cases as low as 8:1) which often makes colleges and universities hesitant to launch, expand or maintain nursing programs.  The high attrition rate that is often found in our nursing schools, contributing factors are due in great part to poorly prepared students specifically in areas of science, math and yes English-language skills and a lottery system that is still being used in many of our community college nursing programs.  A study published in 2001/2002 found that key indicators of success in a nursing program were directly linked to the prospective nursing students’ comprehension and at least B grade in Math, Science and English-language, and when you keep in mind that nursing is a science/math focused skill and that the language of medicine/nursing in this country is English these outcomes make sense.  Senator Scott sponsored legislation that would have replaced the lottery system as it applied to nursing programs with a system that focused on these key indicators, but unfortunately the final bill was substantially water-down leaving the use of the lottery system up to each individual community college   When a nursing class has a high attrition rate then that can translate into empty seats for the remainder of that “student year”.  Nursing programs are also plagued by a great deal of “individuality” which often makes transferring from one nursing program to another problematic.  Not to mention that the average nursing school educator can make more money as a staff nurse with less overall responsibility than as a teacher.

All these issues place a strain on our nursing pipeline, and while these problems are being addressed, all too often it is being addressed piece-meal with very little county, state or nation-wide coordination.  Nursing also needs to find a way to integrate RNs who hold advance degrees that are not in nursing but in related fields into the nursing education pipeline, these nurses could serve to help ameliorate our current educator crisis.  Currently, there is a push for nurses to go immediately from the B.S.N. to the M.S.N. and then on to the Ph.D. or Doctorate in Nursing degree in order to fill the nursing educator gap, but one has to wonder if this push which ignores extensive clinical (or real-world) experience for theoretical and didactic may have on the skills of the student they teach.  And though “book smarts” are all well and good there is something to be said for the nurse who can translate what they’ve learned from the book into the real-world of bedside nursing.

Though as your editorial so quaintly noted that both Cal State Long Beach and Cal State Fullerton B.S.N. program are a mere six-semesters in length, it doesn’t always translate into six uninterrupted semesters.  Many nursing students face roadblocks in taking required courses simply due to the lack of qualified teachers and these roadblocks translate into a delay that could and often does lengthen the time to graduation, and let’s not forget just because one graduates from one of these three pathways does not a RN make, because that graduate must then pass their N.C.L.E.X.-RN exam.  Luckily in California our schools maintain a respectable 88% passage rate, which means most of our graduates then are eligible for licensure.

As someone who has written extensively on the issue of the nursing shortage and an outspoken advocate for nursing I have called on a “Flexner-like” study of our nation’s nursing programs.  In the early 1900s our Nation’s medical schools and the very structure of medicine received an overhaul of sorts in the form of a nation-wide study that is often referred to as the Flexner-study.  This study provided a framework from which all medical schools now design their program around which has allowed for a maximization of available “seats” in medical schools, the facilitation of transfers within and outside school systems all the while maintaining a high level of quality.  I think nursing, too, could benefit from a similar review.  This does not necessarily mean that I think nursing should be forced to adopt the same study tool, but perhaps nursing could use a top to bottom review from a core group of experts that could then provide recommendations on everything from what the entry-level of nursing should be to how we should structure the complete nursing career ladder, to how to design our nursing programs to maximize the available and often limited seats and so forth.

October 3, 2008

Letters to the Editor
Pasadena Star News
Pasadena, CA

Re: “Make room for nurses”

Dear Editor:

Your paper’s effort to address the layered and complicated issues surrounding our Nation’s nursing shortage and nursing education dilemma is commendable; but unfortunately like so many well-intentioned individuals and groups before you, your efforts fell short and your editorial also provided erroneous information.

Two most noticeable mistakes in your editorial are: the Associate-prepared RN does not receive a certificate but receives an Associate Degree of Science in Nursing.  An LVN, though a nurse, is not a RN and not one of the three pathways to an RN licensure.  The LVN licensure has its own scope of practice, is a separate educational and licensure pathway, and in California is regulated by its own nursing board.  The LVN can be and is recognized as part of the nursing career ladder, and many excellent RNs, nursing leaders and educators have begun their career as either a LVN or LPN, before moving up the career ladder to advance training, degrees and licensure.

Many external factors impact our nursing education pipeline, some of which you noted in your article.  However your editorial failed to address issues such as the low student to instructor ratio which is mandated (in some cases as low as 8:1) which often makes colleges and universities hesitant to launch, expand or maintain nursing programs.  Many of our nursing schools have a high attrition rate; contributing factors are due in great part to poorly prepared students specifically in areas of science, math and yes English-language skills.  Nursing programs are also plagued by a great deal of “individuality” which often makes transferring from one nursing program to another problematic.  Not to mention that the average nursing school educator can make more money as a staff nurse. These are just a few of the issues that place a strain on our nursing pipeline, and while these problems are partially addressed, all too often they’re being addressed piece-meal with very little county, state or nation-wide coordination.

psn-room-for-nurses

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Thursday, October 30th, 2008

When newspapers fail, are they even aware of it?

In mid-September I opened my copy of the Los Angeles Times and as I read through the various sections my roving eye stopped at an article picked up from the San Diego Union-Tribune entitled “Outsourcing education”. The article heralds a bold new idea that the California Labor and Workforce Development Agency had worked out to “solve” California’s persistent nursing shortage. The solution they would send upwards to 40 students who had completed their pre-nursing education to attend nursing school at a college in Guadalajara, Mexico. The twist to this brainchild the team at the California Labor and Workforce Development Agency is that the students would have to be English/Spanish bilingual and willing to spend upwards to two years working in a “needy” hospital. It appears this program will cost somewhere in the neighborhood of $20,000 US dollars, not to mention the cost of the team that will be organized to support these students to ensure they acclimate to the new system, and cultural environment.

I attended the California Board of Registered Nursing (BRN) when this notion was presented. What was suppose to be a simple 10 – 15 minute presentation turned out to be nearly an one hour+ dog and pony show, complete with The Honorable Rosario Marin, Secretary of California’s State and Consumer Services Agency and a honcho from the university in Guadalajara. When the members of the BRN expressed concern at what appeared to be an quick start time, they presented the plan with the intent to kick-off the program in January, the members of the BRN were presented with a “your approval is not necessary, since they will be educated outside the US and will enter the California system as a foreign-educated nurse”. When I expressed my concerns at the meeting Stacy Leach form the California Labor and Workforce Development Agency approached me and announced that she had been meaning to contact me, and as of the writing of this post I’m still waiting to hear from her, but then again I’m not surprised at another bureaucrat making empty promises.

Now I’m no investigative journalist but I can tell when something doesn’t seem like it make sense and this entire plan reeks of old fashion patronization. Questions like why will this program cost nearly $20,000 which is the cost of a community college nursing program (hint the current currency conversion rate is 1 USD to 10 Mexican Pesos), why is the program only available to Spanish/English speakers and does this violate equal access laws especially since it appears that the program will be receiving taxpayer dollars, if we can do this why aren’t we investing these dollars in our local community college nursing programs, and if this program is so much on the “up and up” why sneak it through the back door – they presented the program as a fait accompli, etc. One would think that the San Diego Union-Tribune reporters would be the ones asking these questions, but they appeared to be more concerned about regurgitating the press release then asking the really hard questions. And the newspaper owners, editorial boards, reporters, etc., wonder why they continue to lose subscribers.

So when I read the article I sent the following letter to the editor, and since it appears they chose not to run it I am taking this opportunity to post it on my blog.

In closing I fervently believe that we need to muster all resources and ideas to alleviate our nursing shortage (both in the educational and work pipeline). However, first and foremost we need to look at ways of supporting home-grown solutions, as these are the only ones that will have the most long-term and long-reaching affect and effect.

==

September 19, 2007

Letters to the Editor
San Diego Union-Tribune
PO Box 120191
San Diego, CA 92112-0191

Re: “Outsourcing education”

Dear Editor:

As a RN with over 35 years of experience I can’t begin to say how this plan gives me a great deal of concern. What are they thinking?

The plan to pay for almost 40 Spanish/English speaking Californians to attend nursing school in Guadalajara, I believe it is short-sighted and poorly thought out.

First, would such a program if being supported through taxpayer dollars violate our provision of equal access? This could be a problem since the program is not, contrary to the article open to bilingual nursing school students, its only available those who speak Spanish and English.

Second, will the courses in Guadalajara be in English, or will they be conducted in Spanish; and if the later will those graduates be required to take the required English proficiency exams required of nurses educated in foreign countries?

Third, the cost of the program seems high even by California standards. If memory serves the amount quoted in the paper is at the high end of our A.D.N. program so why does this program appear to cost the same dollar to peso?

Four, why not invest these dollars into our local community and community college economy. Why do we continually not blink an eye to outsource when for nearly the same investment we can begin to grow our own nursing pipeline?

In short this is an idea whose time has not come.

Sincerely,
Geneviève M. Clavreul, RN, Ph.D.

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Sunday, October 14th, 2007