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Fact
Sheet
Updated
April 2008
Nursing Fact Sheet
- Nursing
is the nation's largest health care profession, with more than
2.9 million registered nurses nationwide. Of all licensed
RNs, 2.42 million, or 83.2%, are employed in nursing. 1
-
Registered Nurses comprise one of the largest segments of the U.S. workforce as a whole and are among the highest paying large occupations. Nearly 57% of RNs worked in general medical and surgical hospitals, where RN salaries averaged $60,970 per year. With 2.4 million nurses in the workforce in 2006, RNs comprised the largest segment of professionals (28%) working in the healthcare industry.2
- Nurses
comprise the largest single component of hospital staff, are
the primary providers of hospital patient care, and deliver most
of the nation's long-term care.
- Most
health care services involve some form of care by nurses.
In 1980, 66% of all employed RNs worked in hospitals. By
2004, that number had declined to 56.2% as more health
care moved to sites beyond the hospital and nurses increased their
ranks in a wide range of other settings, including private practices,
health maintenance organizations, public health agencies, primary
care clinics, home health care, nursing homes, outpatient surgicenters,
nursing-school-operated nursing centers, insurance and managed
care companies, schools, mental health agencies, hospices, the
military, industry, nursing education, and health care research.
3
- Though
often working collaboratively, nursing does not "assist"
medicine or other fields. Nursing operates independent of,
not auxiliary to, medicine and other disciplines. Nurses' roles
range from direct patient care and case management to establishing
nursing practice standards, developing quality assurance procedures,
and directing complex nursing care systems.
- With
more than four times as many RNs in the United States as physicians,
nursing delivers an extended array of health care services, including
primary and preventive care by advanced nurse practitioners in
such areas as pediatrics, family health, women's health, and gerontological
care. Nursing's scope also includes services by certified nurse-midwives
and nurse anesthetists, as well as care in cardiac, oncology,
neonatal, neurological, and obstetric/gynecological nursing and
other advanced clinical specialties.
- The primary
pathway to professional nursing, as compared to technical-level
practice, is the four-year Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN)
degree . Registered nurses are prepared either through a BSN
program; a three-year associate degree in nursing; or a three-year
hospital training program, receiving a hospital diploma. All take
the same state licensing exam. (The number of diploma programs
has declined steadily -- to less than 10 percent of all basic
RN education programs -- as nursing education has shifted from
hospital-operated instruction into the college and university
system.)
- To meet
the more complex demands of today's health care environment, the
National Advisory Council on Nurse Education and Practice has
recommended that at least two-thirds of the basic nurse workforce
hold baccalaureate or higher degrees in nursing by 2010. 4
Aware of the need, RNs are seeking the BSN degree in increasing
numbers. In 1980, almost 55 percent of employed registered nurses
held a hospital diploma as their highest educational credential,
22 percent held the bachelor's degree, and 18 percent an associate
degree. By 2004, a diploma was the highest educational credential
for only 17.5 percent of RNs, while the number with bachelor's
degrees as their highest education had climbed to 34.2 percent,
with 33.7 percent holding an associate degree as their top academic
preparation.5 In 2007, 14,946 RNs with diplomas or
associate degrees graduated from BSN programs.6
- In 2004,
13.0 percent of the nation's registered nurses held either a master's
or doctoral degree as their highest educational preparation. 7
The current demand for master's- and doctorally prepared nurses
for advanced practice, clinical specialties, teaching, and research
roles far outstrips the supply.
- According
to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Registered Nursing is
the top occupation in terms of the largest job growth from 2006 - 2016.8
Government analysts project that more than 587,000 new RN jobs will be created through 2016. Other federal projections indicate that by 2020, the U.S.
nursing shortage will grow to more than 800,000 registered nurses.9 Even as health care continues to shift beyond the
hospital to more community-based primary care and other outpatient
sites, federal projections say the rising complexity of acute
care will see demand for RNs in hospitals climb by 36 percent
by 2020.10
#
# #
The
American Association of Colleges of Nursing is the national voice
for university and four-year-college education programs in nursing.
Representing more than 625 schools of nursing at public and private
institutions nationwide, AACN's educational, research, governmental
advocacy, databank, publications, and other programs work to establish
quality standards for bachelor's- and graduate-degree nursing education,
assist deans and directors to implement those standards, influence
the nursing profession to improve health care, and promote public
support of baccalaureate and graduate nursing education, research,
and practice.
REFERENCES
-
Health
Resources and Services Administration. (February 2007). The Registered Nurse Population: Findings From the March 2004 National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses. Washington,
DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
-
-
See Note
1.
-
National
Advisory Council on Nurse Education and Practice. (October 1996).
Report to the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human
Services on the Basic Registered Nurse Workforce. Washington,
DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Division of
Nursing.
-
See Note
1.
-
American
Association of Colleges of Nursing (2008). 2007-2008 Enrollment
and graduations in baccalaureate and graduate programs in nursing.
Washington, DC: Author.
-
See Note
1.
-
Dohm, A. and Shniper, L. (2007). Occupational Employment Projections to 2016.
Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics.
-
Health
Resources and Services Administration, Bureau of Health Professions.
(2002). Projected Supply, Demand and Shortages of Registered
Nurses: 2000-2020. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services.
-
See Note
4.
Last Update: April 1, 2008
# # #
CONTACT:
Robert Rosseter
rrossete@aacn.nche.edu
(202) 463-6930, x231
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Copyright
© 2008 by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing.
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