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The Sick Outweigh The Care: Article Analysis

1243 Words5 Pages

Carissa Laukhuf
Dr. Allen Berres
English 112
30 March 2018
The Sick Outweigh the Care Keith Carlson, a registered nurse that works with nurse students as a career coach, discusses the pivotal role of nurses in healthcare in the article, “The Central Importance of Nursing.” Carlson writes, “Nursing has been central to the delivery of modern healthcare for many decades.” Nurses are vital to patient care; as a result, they are in constant demand. The healthcare system is always changing with new innovations and procedures; however, the need for nurses never waivers. Nursing has become a very broad job that can be extremely specialized from scrub to clinical nurses. Each specialty comes with a different set of problems. When people think of a …show more content…

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics in the article, “Occupational Employment and Wages, May 2016 Registered Nurses”, 26.9% of nurses work somewhere besides a hospital. Nurses are in a very high demand in hospitals; however, over a quarter of nurses end up working elsewhere. Nurses seem to be finding anyway to avoid working in hospitals, such as becoming nurse bloggers. When someone goes into nursing, becoming a blogger does not usually seem to be their end game. However, many nursing graduates may have just found a different passion, and they are just using their education as a nurse. Another factor for the nurse shortage is how competitive nursing programs are. According to the National League of Nurses, in 2014 31% of qualified applications for a bachelor of nursing program were turned down. The alarming rate at which nurses are in demand may have to do with the large amount of qualified candidates being turned down. This could be due to the programs only having the resources for a certain amount of students; however, nursing programs should be expanding with the growing need for nurses, not decreasing. Widespread programs may be very difficult to enact; however, if each program adds just a few seats for more students, the results would be larger than expected because there are so many programs throughout the country. Expansion and growth are important in any field, but more so in the medical field. …show more content…

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