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Nursing shortage spurs new programs
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By
Cristina Rodriguez / Staff Writer
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University of Southern Nevada
nursing students Simon Do, left, and
Mike Schaupp care for Edmund Kaja at
the St. Rose Dominican Hospital-Rose
de Lima Campus in Henderson on
Monday. The nursing school has 31
students in its first nursing class
and expects another 80 for its next
class, which begins in August. |
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Photo by Steve Marcus |
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Individuals in the following groups seeking a
nursing degree should consider themselves lucky:
Professionals who work during the day, those who
want to finish degrees quickly and nurses who cannot
make day or night classes.
Six local nursing school programs — three of them
new — are targeting niches such as these and making
education more convenient than ever for associate's,
bachelor's and master's degrees.
The impetus is to rescue Nevada from its status as
the next-to-worst state for nurses per population, a
dishonor it received from the 2004 National Sample
Survey of Registered Nurses.
Among the newest education programs in the Las Vegas
Valley include the intensive 18-month track offered
at the University of Southern Nevada, a new private
institution. Touro University, also private and new,
has tracks for nursing master's degrees for existing
nurses and for those with bachelor's degrees that
are not in nursing. University of Phoenix offers
online bachelor's degrees for existing RNs.
Some of the state programs' latest features — and
there are many — include an online-heavy master's
track at UNLV, a part-time associate's program at
CCSN and a 12-month plan for post-baccalaureate
students at Nevada State College.
"It's not just a question of creating new slots,"
said Jane Nichols, vice chancellor for academic and
student affairs for the Nevada System of Higher
Education. "Institutions did some very creative
things all the initiatives made a huge difference."
Growth has already been on an upswing since the
Legislature told state colleges to double 2000-2001
enrollment figures in nursing programs.
More than 1,000 nursing students were in the
valley's public institutions in the 2004 to 2005
school year, the most recent year for which numbers
were available. Enrollment had grown by 42 percent
in UNLV, CCSN and Nevada State College from the
2003-2004 year. (And by 197 percent since the
2000-2001 year, considering NSC started its program
in the 2003-2004 school year.)
"We are looking at a plan to again try to double
nursing enrollment at the request of the legislative
committee on health care," Nichols said. "The
initiative to do this is not coming from
institutions; it's coming from the community."
The strategy to increase school enrollment is
endorsed by groups such as hospitals and state
departments, but it is not universally accepted.
Service Employees International Union Local 1107,
the nurses' union currently in contract negotiations
with hospitals, contends that the nursing shortage
is a result of poor pay and conditions rather than
qualified employees.
Regardless of how it is explained, though, the
nursing shortage is a nationwide trend, with other
cities struggling to recruit, retain and establish
pools of qualified teachers.
Las Vegas nursing school leaders say they expect
continued growth in their programs, regardless of
how optimistic they are that the problem will ever
be resolved.
Touro's programs, for example, are designed to
create more qualified teachers because three-fourths
of nursing instructors for bachelor's degrees in
Nevada are required to have master's degrees in
nursing.
But Sue Ullrich, director of nursing, sees the
problem as insurmountable, even though she thinks
the University of Nevada system is doing a fine job.
"Even with the mandate to double, (the state) still
can't meet the needs for nurses," she said. "We
still can't do it; it's an impossibility in my
mind.''
Mabel Smith, dean of the USN College of Nursing, is
reaching across the country to recruit students. The
university is placing an advertisement in the
Houston Chronicle, for example.
Smith predicted that, outside of efforts in the Las
Vegas area, overall industry trends may prove
helpful in enrollment goals.
"There are now record applicants for nursing
programs," she said. "The nursing profession itself
has made tremendous gains. The salaries are higher,
the career options for nurses are so varied. You can
do three 12-hour shifts and be done for the week."
Cristina Rodriguez covers medical and workplace
issues for In Business Las Vegas and its sister
publication, the Las Vegas Sun. She can be reached
at (702) 259-2326 or by e-mail at
cristina.rodriguez@lasvegassun.com.
Original source at
http://www.inbusinesslasvegas.com/2006/06/09/feature1.html |