Taking Stock of the Nursing Profession as the Pandemic Weakens Its Hold

Projected nursing shortages by 2026, by state. Click image to expand.

Exhaustion and burnout. Insufficient workplace protections. The growth of contract nursing. A lack of minimum staffing ratios.

These and other issues have been important nursing topics since long before the pandemic. But as the essential work of nurses has come under a brighter spotlight during the COVID crisis, headlines and news stories have been increasingly highlighting these important topics, providing wider recognition of nurses’ experiences and concerns.

In just the past week, a sampling of headlines from across the country show how nursing workforce issues are taking center stage, from insufficient workplace protections in California to state legislatures considering capping travel nurses’ pay in Missouri to workforce shortages in Pennsylvania to unsafe working conditions in Maine.

Liz Seegert explores where the profession stands as the country enters the third year of the COVID pandemic in the February AJN Reports,The Current State of Nursing.” She notes the results of recent surveys, including one by the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses that looked at how the pandemic has affected nursing.

“Exhaustion, frustration, anger, burnout, depression, and fear for their own and […]

2022-03-07T09:52:15-05:00March 7th, 2022|Nursing|0 Comments

“The Next Time She Needs a Pap Smear at 3 AM . . . “

Sunset, Turks and Caicos Islands


By Christine Moffa, MS, RN-BC,
AJN clinical editor

Vacations are an important part of keeping balanced in life and a good way to prevent career burnout. However, I’m sure that, like me, many of you have had to step out of relaxation mode to come to the aid of some unfortunate vacationer who either injured herself or himself trying a new activity, had a near drowning at the beach, or suffered some other tragedy.

I’ve just returned from a trip with six friends to Turks and Caicos. There was beach, sun, a lot of activities like snorkeling and the flying trapeze, and unlimited food and alcohol; in other words, it was the perfect set-up for a trip to the infirmary. (I once had a three-week nursing gig at a resort, so I know the usual ailments: overindulgence in food, alcohol, and sun; twisted ankles from people playing sports they haven’t attempted in the last 10 years; and the occasional serious accident or heart attack.)

Two days into the trip, one of my co-travelers fell ill with food poisoning, which resulted in a day’s worth of vomiting. At 2 a.m. my phone rang. It was this friend telling me that not only was she sick, but she’d just hit […]

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