Penn: University of Pennsylvania

Communications Home
News Releases
Penn in the News
Daily Media Clips
News at a Glance
Experts at Penn
Other Penn News Sources
Web Services
Staff
Filming at Penn
Contact Us / Send Us Ideas


Penn Home Penn A-Z Directories Calendar Maps

Media contactJoy McIntyre 215-898-5074 joymc@nursing.upenn.edu
Jill DiSanto-Haines 215-898-4820 jdisanto@upenn.edu

printer-friendly version
email this article
Penn Nursing Researchers: Nursing Needs a Bailout, Federal Scholarships Needed to Fix the Nursing Shortage
June 17, 2009

PHILADELPHIA — Researchers from the Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing say having enough nurses to meet a national shortage is a “mathematical improbability” unless nursing schools admit more students through federal financial support in a potential bailout, according to an article in today’s issue of Health Affairs.

The Penn Nursing researchers argue that, under current economic conditions, it is shortsighted to allow highly sought-after nursing jobs to go vacant while scores of prospective nursing students are turned away.

The nation is projected to face a shortage of 500,000 nurses by 2025.

The authors call for new public subsidies for nursing education to be targeted to baccalaureate and graduate education for nurses.

“We are proposing increased federal funding under Title VIII and through Medicare to support nursing education so we have more nurses at the hospital bedside,” said Linda Aiken, Penn Nursing professor and lead author of the study. Administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration, Title VIII of the Public Health Service Act provides funding for nursing workforce-development programs.

The greatest national needs are for nurses with the qualifications to be teachers, advance-practice nurses, such as nurse practitioners, and leaders in complex health-care organizations, according to the researchers.

“Nursing is one of the most popular choices for college students today, but thousands of prospective students are waiting for admission because of capacity limitations resulting from faculty shortages and undergraduate enrollment caps imposed by financially strapped colleges and universities, ” Aiken said.

Fewer nurses who are originally educated with associate degrees go on to achieve master’s or Ph.D. degrees, exacerbating the shortage of nurses who can be faculty and educate the next generation of nurses.

“Federal and state funding for nursing education is essential to produce more nursing faculty and to support expanded undergraduate nursing student enrollments,” Aiken said. “With targeted public investments in expanding nursing-school enrollments, we can take advantage of historically high interest in nursing as a career to solve the nation’s nursing shortage well into the future.”

« previous | next »

News at a Glance for
» Health & Medicine

Recent News Releases

Police Accreditation Team Invites Public Comment about Penn Police

Penn Hosts Daylong Arts Crawl Today

University of Pennsylvania Receives Top Ranking in Public Safety for Educational Facilities

Inaugural Group of Penn Eco-Reps Seeks to Educate, Change Residents’ Eco-Behavior at Three College Houses

Penn and Milken Family Foundation Launch Global Business Plan Competition to Improve Education


Contact Us

For general inquiries, call 215-898-8721.

For specific inquiries, please refer to our detailed listing of news officers.

Office of University Communications, 200 Sansom Place East, 3600 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6106.


Penn Home Penn A-Z Directories Calendar Maps
Copyright © 2009, University of Pennsylvania
Office of University Communications
200 Sansom Place East, 3600 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6106
Copyright Information | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer