No Simple Cure

Sunday, December 03, 2006 - by ASTD Staff

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As a reflection of an industry-wide problem confronting the health care field, Texas hospitals have been experiencing acute shortages among nurses and allied health professionals. The University Health System (UHS) in San Antonio was no exception. UHS is a 604-bed, acute care hospital, and the primary teaching facility for The University of Texas Health Science Center, as well as neighborhood and outpatient clinics. The system has

4,500 employees.

UHS alone was experiencing a vacancy rate among registered nurses of 22 percent in 2001, threatening patient care and requiring the UHS emergency center to close its doors to some trauma events. Across the city, hospitals were reporting 800 RN vacancies. Among the problems causing the gap: significant numbers of today's nurses are approaching retirement; qualified applicants to nursing and allied health instructional programs are in short supply; and, experienced adult workers who might be interested in a career switch to nursing face job and family pressures that make it impossible to attend college full-time. Compounding these problems was a shortage of faculty members to train nurses. With many faculty retiring, new nurses were not taking their places because they could earn more in staff nursing positions.

No magic bullet

Realizing there was no single magic bullet to address the shortage of nurses, UHS joined in a wide-ranging partnership with other health care facilities, educational institutions and government workforce development entities to convene a healthcare summit in 2001. Among the outcomes of the summit: UHS forged partnerships with three local schools of nursing to certify UHS nursing staff as adjunct faculty members and to create "extension campuses" at the hospital.

UHS also adopted what the system's administrative director, Jacque Burandt, called a "grow your own" strategy to provide nursing instruction to workers in non-nursing jobs. Through the Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) program, UHS enabled environmental service and food service workers, as well as other incumbent employees, to obtain clinical experience and mentoring as nursing aides as a first step toward obtaining nursing scholarships and careers.

"In the past, there has been a huge hole in the pipeline of new nurses because people could not get the clinical experience they needed without leaving their jobs and going to the community college to start their training," says Burandt. With funding from state and local workforce development initiatives, the CNA program offered workers the flexibility and the support they needed to bridge the gap.

Vacancy rate drops

Through its partnerships with local nursing schools to add faculty and create extension campuses at the hospital, UHS was able to create and fill more than 70 new nursing student slots, an increase of 25 percent. In addition, more than 25 UHS staff had completed the CNA program as of early 2006. At UHS, the success of these and other efforts could be seen in a huge reduction in the vacancy rate for RNs to just 2 or 3 percent.

"We're making it more convenient for people to get the instruction they need," says Burandt. She adds that a key factor in UHS's success has been a stepped approach to instruction, with each new step leading to a certification and enhanced job prospects.

No Simple Cure

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