We have what we need to help close the Nursing Shortage gap
Over the weekend, a headline appeared in the Toronto Star that caught my attention: 鈥.鈥欌赌
As the headline implies, it鈥檚 news, but it鈥檚 not new.聽
Nurses are in high demand around the world and no place really has anywhere near the number of trained professionals to meet that demand. Nor is it a surprise. Governments, hospitals, and nurses themselves have known this moment was coming for a long time.聽
础蝉听聽in the article, 鈥淎s far back as 2009, the Canadian Nurses Organization predicted that the shortfall would reach 60,000 by 2022.鈥澛 A聽聽was highlighted in a Health Workforce Australia report as early as 2014聽. The UK National Health Service identified聽聽in its healthcare workforce. The聽聽estimated an RN shortage of over 500,000 by 2030.聽
COVID, of course, didn鈥檛 help matters. The聽厂迟补谤听article reports that the current US nursing shortfall could be as high as 1.2 million, and that some of those positions could be filled by nurses trained in Canada and lured south of the border. All of this, of course, is bad news for Canada. What鈥檚 worse, Doris Grinspun, CEO of the Registered Nurses鈥 Association of Ontario, believes there is no immediate solution to the crisis because training nurses takes such a long time and the need is so immediate.聽
What are we going to do about it?聽
Is there really nothing we can do to get more nurses into the system quickly? To answer that question, let鈥檚 look at four main barriers to success, and how they can each be overcome:
1) Lack of Instructors:聽Just as there are fewer nurses in the workforce to take care of patients, there are fewer instructors available to educate students in nursing and other healthcare fields. As Grinspun points out, the time it takes to train a nurse is considerable, and some of the most staggering shortages exist in rural communities where postsecondary education is not readily accessible.聽
However, we聽know聽that there are thousands of pre-career people waiting to get in the door of nursing programs. The Ontario Universities Application Centre reported a聽聽in 2021-22. Demand for nurses was so high in 2020, and spaces were so limited that American universities and colleges were forced to reject more than 80,000 nursing applicants according to the聽聽Where there is demand among students, there is an opportunity to address it - either through government support or an innovative institution. The best part? In a distance model, clinical supervisors are spread out in communities across the country and Master鈥檚-trained instructors can teach online from anywhere.
2) Distance Deterrence:聽One of the biggest challenges facing the working learner is geographic distance deterrence: working professionals are already well-established in their careers and their communities. They have families. Mortgages. Responsibilities. They often can鈥檛 simply pick up and move to a campus.聽
叠耻迟听聽are a fit for people who have career-oriented goals, but can't fit in on-campus education to upskill or reskill because of time, finances, work responsibilities, and life commitments. Already, there are five Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing (ABSN) programs available through distance programming in the US. It鈥檚 a start.聽
3) Lack of Capacity:聽多人群交 brings a global, data-driven perspective to its partner universities and works with them to聽build capacity聽through distance learning programs. These programs ensure that students who are tied to specific communities through their work, like healthcare workers, are able to learn online and complete their clinical placements in the communities where they live. Experienced workers can be upskilled or re-skilled in a way that creates flexibility for the learner while maintaining quality for the institution.聽
Expanding enrolment beyond the campus footprint provides a university with new ways to connect working healthcare professionals and underserved communities with quality educational opportunities that, in turn, improve the lives of others, thereby fulfilling the fundamental mission of a university.
4) Technological Infrastructure:聽While the COVID-19 pandemic presents a massive global challenge, it has also been the catalyst for the kinds of innovations we need to build on distance programming. Hospitals and the people who work there are now making use of tools like tele-conferencing and telemedicine more than ever. The resources (such as secure platforms for communicating, cameras, screens, and internet bandwidth) needed to make it happen are already installed.聽
In almost every sector, the pandemic has changed how we work; of course, health care is no different, even while under the extreme strain of managing the front line of the pandemic.聽聽A recent study, 鈥,鈥 shows that health care education is being called to change, too: 鈥淭hey projected further innovations in teaching and learning methods ... and highlighted the need to invest in faculty development so medical educators can be equipped and competent in diverse ICT (information and communications technology) learning platforms.鈥
We Can Close the Gap聽
The online education model for entry-level and advanced healthcare professionals presents an enormous opportunity for postsecondary institutions in every province to reach students where they are 鈥 whether living in rural communities or working full time and not able to attend a traditional in-person program.聽
Closing the gap on this shortage will enable an entire sector to meet the needs of the people who depend on them, creating opportunities for people eager to re-train, reskill or upskill and make meaningful contributions in their communities through their careers. And it means bringing more students to universities who need them. Health care and education are two of the province鈥檚 biggest priorities, affecting every single Ontarian.聽
Addressing the nursing shortage doesn鈥檛 have to wait. We have what it takes to act now.聽
Learn more about 多人群交鈥檚 approach to worldwide health care innovation: 鈥鈥